GLORIA

GEOMAR Library Ocean Research Information Access

feed icon rss

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2022-03-23
    Description: Focused gas migration through the gas hydrate stability zone in vertical gas conduits is a global phenomenon. The process can lead to concentrated gas hydrate formation and seafloor gas seepage, which influences seafloor biodiversity and ocean biogeochemistry. However, much is unknown about how gas and gas hydrate co‐exist within and around gas conduits. We present seismic imaging of the gas hydrate system beneath a four‐way closure anticlinal ridge at New Zealand's southern Hikurangi subduction margin. Gas has accumulated beneath the base of gas hydrate stability to a thickness of up to ∼240 m, which has ultimately led to hydraulic fracturing and propagation of a vertical gas conduit to the seafloor. Despite the existence of an array of normal faults beneath the ridge, these structures are not exploited as long‐range gas flow conduits. Directly beneath the conduit, and extending upward from the regional base of gas hydrate stability, is a broad zone characterized by both negative‐ and positive‐polarity reflections. We interpret this zone as a volume of sediment hosting both gas hydrate and free gas, that developed due to partial gas trapping beneath a mass transport deposit. Similar highly reflective zones have been identified at the bases of other gas conduits, but they are not intrinsic to all gas conduits through gas hydrate systems. We suggest that pronounced intervening sealing units within the gas hydrate stability zone determine whether or not they form.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: Gas hydrates are ice‐like substances composed of natural gas and water. They form between sediment grains underneath large regions of the Earth's seafloor. An important reason to study gas hydrates is that they partly control the way that methane gas flows through sediments and out of the seafloor. It is this flow of methane that sustains some diverse biological communities on the seafloor and affects the chemistry of the oceans. In this study, we use reflected sound waves to explore how gas flow beneath the seafloor depends on the way in which sedimentary layers are folded and fractured. Our data reveal a 240‐m thick reservoir of gas that is trapped in a large sedimentary fold, ∼500 m beneath the seafloor. The buoyancy of the gas has caused a vertical fracture zone to propagate upward to the seafloor, where gas bubbles are venting into the ocean. Further, our data suggest that a broad accumulation of gas hydrates (together with gas) has formed beneath the vertical fracture zone. This gas hydrate deposit may grow larger with time, and it will continue to influence the way that gas flows through the sediments.
    Description: Key Points: 240 m thick free gas column accumulated beneath the base of hydrate stability, which led to hydraulic fracturing and gas chimney formation. Broad zone of free gas and gas hydrate formed beneath the gas chimney, extending upward from the regional base of hydrate stability. Such zones of hydrate and free gas likely form due to pronounced lithological contrasts (sealing layers) within the hydrate stability zone.
    Description: New Zealand's Ministry for Business Innovation and Employment (MBIE) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100004629
    Keywords: ddc:553.28
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-03-29
    Description: Although submarine landslides have been studied for decades, a persistent challenge is the integration of diverse geoscientific datasets to characterize failure processes. We present a core‐log‐seismic integration study of the Tuaheni Landslide Complex to investigate intact sediments beneath the undeformed seafloor as well as post‐failure landslide deposits. Beneath the undeformed seafloor are coherent reflections underlain by a weakly‐reflective and chaotic seismic unit. This chaotic unit is characterized by variable shear strength that correlates with density fluctuations. The basal shear zone of the Tuaheni landslide likely exploited one (or more) of the low shear strength intervals. Within the landslide deposits is a widespread “Intra‐debris Reflector”, previously interpreted as the landslide's basal shear zone. This reflector is a subtle impedance drop around the boundary between upper and lower landslide units. However, there is no pronounced shear strength change across this horizon. Rather, there is a pronounced reduction in shear strength ∼10–15 m above the Intra‐debris Reflector that presumably represents an induced weak layer that developed during failure. Free gas accumulates beneath some regions of the landslide and is widespread deeper in the sedimentary sequence, suggesting that free gas may have played a role in pre‐conditioning the slope to failure. Additional pre‐conditioning or failure triggers could have been seismic shaking and associated transient fluid pressure. Our study underscores the importance of detailed core‐log‐seismic integration approaches for investigating basal shear zone development in submarine landslides.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: Submarine landslides move enormous amounts of sediment across the seafloor and have the potential to generate damaging tsunamis. To understand how submarine landslides develop, we need to be able to image and sample beneath the seafloor in regions where landslides have occurred. To image beneath the seafloor we generate sound waves in the ocean and record reflections from those waves, enabling us to produce “seismic images” of sediment layers and structures beneath the seafloor. We then use scientific drilling to sample the sediment layers and measure physical properties. In this study, we combine seismic images and drilling results to investigate a submarine landslide east of New Zealand's North Island. Drilling next to the landslide revealed a ∼25 m‐thick layer of sediment (from ∼75–95 m below the seafloor) that has strong variations in sediment strength and density. We infer that intervals of relatively low strength within this layer developed into the main sliding surface of the landslide. Additionally, results from within the landslide suggest that the process of landslide emplacement has induced a zone of weak sediments closer to the seafloor. Our study demonstrates how combining seismic images and drilling data helps to understand submarine landslide processes.
    Description: Key Points: We integrate scientific drilling data with seismic reflection data to investigate the submarine Tuaheni Landslide Complex. Basal shear zone of the landslide likely exploited a relatively low shear strength interval within an older (buried) mass transport deposit. Landslide emplacement seems to have induced an additional weak zone that is shallower than the interpreted base of the landslide deposit.
    Description: Marsden Fund (Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Fund) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100009193
    Description: European Consortium for Ocean Research Drilling
    Description: International Ocean Drilling Program, Science Support Program
    Description: New Zealand Ministry for Business Innovation and Employment
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.928073
    Keywords: ddc:622.15 ; ddc:551
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Publication Date: 2020-12-23
    Description: International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 372 combined two research topics, slow slip events (SSEs) on subduction faults (IODP Proposal 781A-Full) and actively deforming gas hydrate-bearing landslides (IODP Proposal 841-APL). Our study area on the Hikurangi margin, east of the coast of New Zealand, provided unique locations for addressing both research topics.SSEs at subduction zones are an enigmatic form of creeping fault behavior. They typically occur on subduction zones at depths beyond the capabilities of ocean floor drilling. However, at the northern Hikurangi subduction margin they are among the best-documented and shallowest on Earth. Here, SSEs may extend close to the trench, where clastic and pelagic sediments about 1.0-1.5 km thick overlie the subducting, seamount-studded Hikurangi Plateau. Geodetic data show that these SSEs recur about every 2 years and are associated with measurable seafloor displacement. The northern Hikurangi subduction margin thus provides an excellent setting to use IODP capabilities to discern the mechanisms behind slow slip fault behaviour.
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    Publication Date: 2020-01-17
    Description: Subaqueous slopes are susceptible to a broad range of failure mechanisms and deformation styles, many of which are not well characterised. We undertook novel laboratory-based testing using a Dynamic Back-Pressured Shearbox on samples collected from an area subject to ongoing slope failures, situated on the upper slope of New Zealand's Hikurangi Margin, to determine how increases in pore water and gas pressures generate shallow mass movement. Using both water and nitrogen gas we observed similar responses in both cases, indicating that behaviour is dominated by the normal effective stress state regardless of pore-fluid phase. Shear-strain accumulation, representing landslide movement, shows a slow episodic pattern, in common with many shallow terrestrial landslides. Our results are relevant for landslides occurring in shallow near surface sedimentary sequences but have implications for deep-seated landslide behaviour. They suggest that once movement initiates at a critical effective stress, its rate is regulated through dilation and pore expansion within the shear zone, temporarily increasing effective stress within a narrow shear band and suppressing rapid shear. Consequently, under certain conditions, shallow submarine landslides (e.g. spreading failures) can undergo slow episodic movement which allows them to accumulate large shear strains without accelerating to catastrophic movement even when they are unconstrained.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Slow slip events (SSEs) at the northern Hikurangi subduction margin, New Zealand, are among the best-documented shallow SSEs on Earth. International Ocean Discovery Program Expeditions 372 and 375 were undertaken to investigate the processes and in situ conditions that underlie subduction zone SSEs at the northern Hikurangi Trough. We accomplished this goal by (1) coring and geophysical logging at four sites, including penetration of an active thrust fault (the Pāpaku fault) near the deformation front, the upper plate above the SSE source region, and the incoming sedimentary succession in the Hikurangi Trough and atop the Tūranganui Knoll seamount; and (2) installing borehole observatories in the Pāpaku fault and in the upper plate overlying the slow slip source region. Logging-while-drilling (LWD) data for this project were acquired as part of Expedition 372, and coring, wireline logging, and observatory installations were conducted during Expedition 375. Northern Hikurangi subduction margin SSEs recur every 1–2 y and thus provide an ideal opportunity to monitor deformation and associated changes in chemical and physical properties throughout the slow slip cycle. In situ measurements and sampling of material from the sedimentary section and oceanic basement of the subducting plate reveal the rock properties, composition, lithology, and structural character of material that is transported downdip into the SSE source region. A recent seafloor geodetic experiment raises the possibility that SSEs at northern Hikurangi may propagate to the trench, indicating that the shallow thrust fault (the Pāpaku fault) targeted during Expeditions 372 and 375 may also lie in the SSE rupture area and host a portion of the slip in these events. Hence, sampling and logging at this location provides insights into the composition, physical properties, and architecture of a shallow fault that may host slow slip. Expeditions 372 and 375 were designed to address three fundamental scientific objectives: Characterize the state and composition of the incoming plate and shallow fault near the trench, which comprise the protolith and initial conditions for fault zone rock at greater depth and which may itself host shallow slow slip; Characterize material properties, thermal regime, and stress conditions in the upper plate directly above the SSE source region; and Install observatories in the Pāpaku fault near the deformation front and in the upper plate above the SSE source to measure temporal variations in deformation, temperature, and fluid flow. The observatories will monitor volumetric strain (via pore pressure as a proxy) and the evolution of physical, hydrological, and chemical properties throughout the SSE cycle. Together, the coring, logging, and observatory data will test a suite of hypotheses about the fundamental mechanics and behavior of SSEs and their relationship to great earthquakes along the subduction interface.
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: archive
    Format: archive
    Format: other
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    GSL (Geological Society of London)
    In:  In: Subaqueous Mass Movements and their Consequences: Advances in Process Understanding, Monitoring and Hazard Assessments. , ed. by Georgiopoulou, A. Special Publications Geological Society London, 500 . GSL (Geological Society of London), London, pp. 477-494.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-21
    Description: Submarine landslides occur on continental margins globally and can have devastating consequences for marine habitats, offshore infrastructure and coastal communities due to potential tsunamigenesis. Therefore, understanding landslide magnitude and distribution is central to marine and coastal hazard planning. We present the first submarine landslide database for the eastern margin of New Zealand comprising 〉2200 landslides occurring in water depths from c. 300–4000 m. Landslides are more prevalent and, on average, larger on the active margin compared with the passive margin. We attribute higher concentrations of landslides on the active margin to tectonic processes including uplift and oversteepening, faulting and seamount subduction. Submarine landslide scars are concentrated around canyon systems and close to canyon thalwegs. This suggests that not only does mass wasting play a major role in canyon evolution, but also that canyon-forming processes may provide preconditioning factors for slope failure. Results of this study offer unique insights into the spatial distribution, magnitude and morphology of submarine landslides across different geological settings, providing a better understanding of the causative factors for mass wasting in New Zealand and around the world.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Texas A&M Univ.
    In:  In: Creeping Gas Hydrate Slides. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 372A . Texas A&M Univ., College Station, TX, pp. 1-40.
    Publication Date: 2021-08-17
    Description: International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Site U1517(proposed Site TLC-04B) is located at 38°49.772ʹS, 178°28.557ʹE inthe extensional, creeping part of the Tuaheni Landslide Complex(TLC) (Figure F1; see Figure F2 in the Expedition 372A summarychapter [Barnes et al., 2019a]) (Mountjoy et al., 2014b). HoleU1517A was drilled in a water depth of 725 meters below sea level(mbsl); Holes U1517B and U1517C lie at 720 mbsl. The primarydrilling objective was to log and sample through the landslide massand the gas hydrate stability zone to understand the mechanismsbehind creeping. Therefore, we planned to log the sediment columnto 205 meters below seafloor (mbsf ) using logging-while-drilling(LWD) tools, followed by advanced piston corer (APC) coring, pres-sure coring, and temperature dual pressure probe (T2P) deploy-ments.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: Highlights • Seismic depth imaging gives insight into the southern Hikurangi subduction zone. • Velocities reveal regional variations in compaction and drainage of input sediments. • Dewatering of subducted sediments might influence décollement strength. • Thrusts at the leading edge of deformation are upper-plate dewatering pathways. • Stratigraphic host of the décollement changes at the southern end of the margin. Abstract The southern end of New Zealand's Hikurangi subduction margin accommodates highly oblique convergence between the Pacific and Australian plates. We carry out two-dimensional (2D) seismic reflection tomography and pre-stack depth migrations on two seismic lines to gain insight into the nature of subducted sediments and upper plate faulting and dewatering at the toe of the wedge. We also investigate the NE to SW evolution of emergent upper plate thrust faulting using 47 seismic lines spanning an along-strike distance of ∼270 km. The upper sequence of sediments that ultimately gets subducted (the MES sequence) has an anomalously-low seismic velocity character. At the southwestern end of the margin, ∼150 km east of Kaikōura, the MES sequence has experienced greater compaction (for an equivalent effective vertical stress) than it has some 200 km further to the northeast. This difference is likely attributable to greater horizontal compression in the southwest caused by impingement of the Chatham Rise on the deformation front. Relationships between velocity and effective vertical stress suggest that the MES sequence is well-drained in the vicinity of frontal thrusts, corroborated by evidence for upper plate dewatering along those thrusts. Effective drainage of the MES sequence likely promotes interplate coupling on the southern Hikurangi margin. The décollement is generally hosted near a seismic reflector known as “Reflector 7”. East of Kaikōura, however, Reflector 7 becomes accreted, indicating that subduction slip at the southwestern end of the margin is no longer hosted at (or above) this reflector. Instead, the décollement steps down to a deeper stratigraphic level further inboard. Further to the SW, approximately in line with the lower Kaikōura Canyon, the offshore manifestation of subduction-driven compression ceases.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    Publication Date: 2022-01-31
    Description: Highlights • We report on methane seeps found at shallow depths on New Zealand's Hikurangi Margin. • Tools have been applied to measure bubble characteristics from video footage and to estimate the gas flow rate using acoustic data. • We estimate that the entire Tuaheni seep field produces somewhere in the range of 30–2415 t of methane per year. • The density of seeps at this location is far greater than anything else observed on the Hikurangi Margin. Abstract We analyse an area of high density submarine methane gas seeps situated on the shelf to slope transition (130–420 m water depth) on the northern region of New Zealand's Hikurangi margin, off Poverty Bay. Multibeam and singlebeam echo sounder data collected in 2014 and 2015 revealed 〉600 seeps, at much greater density than any previously mapped areas of seepage on the Hikurangi margin. To broadly constrain the output of methane from these seeps, we have estimated the flow of methane at individual seeps, utilising perspective-measurements applied to still frames from a deep towed camera system to measure the dimensions of rising bubbles. We combine bubble size and rise-rate distributions with singlebeam acoustic data to estimate gas flow rates at six selected seeps sites. Our results predict a wide range (3.0–2249 mL/min) of methane release into the water column. If we assume that the six seeps we analysed are representative of the entire seep population, and that gas flow is constant, we can extrapolate across the seep field and infer a gas release of 30 to 2415 t of methane per year into the ocean.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Although subaqueous slopes on active continental margins are subject to a variety of failure styles, their movement mechanisms during earthquakes remain poorly constrained. A primary explanation is that few submarine landslides have been directly sampled for detailed investigation. We have conducted a series of dynamic shear experiments on samples recovered from the base of the Tuaheni Landslide Complex, located off the east coast of the North Island of New Zealand, to explore its behaviour during earthquakes. Our experiments suggest that whilst the basal landslide sediments can be prone to liquefaction in certain conditions, this is not a likely failure mechanism at the stress states operating in the low angled shear zone at the base of this landslide system. Instead, episodic landslide movement can occur through basal sliding when pore water pressures increase sufficiently to lower the shear zone effective stress to the material failure envelope. These low effective stress conditions are most likely to be reached during earthquakes that produce large amplitude, long duration ground shaking. The observed behaviour provides a credible mechanism through which subaqueous landslides moving on low angled shear zones in similar materials may be subject to episodic movement during earthquakes without undergoing catastrophic failure.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...