Fulthrope, Craig S. et al. (2011): IODP Expedition 317; exploring the record of sea-level change off New Zealand

Leg/Site/Hole:
IODP 317
IODP 317 U1351
Identifier:
2012-014162
georefid

10.2204/iodp.sd.12.01.2011
doi

Creator:
Fulthrope, Craig S.
University of Texas-Austin, Institute for Geophysics, Austin, TX, United States
author

Hoyanagi, Koichi
Shinshu University, Japan
author

Blum, Peter
Texas A&M University, United States
author

Blair, Stacie
author

Browne, Gregory
author

Carter, Robert
author

Ciobanu, Maria-Cristina
author

Claypool, George
author

Crundwell, Martin
author

Dinares-Turrell, Jaime
author

Ding, Xuan
author

George, Simon
author

Guerin, Gilles
author

Hepp, Daniel
author

Jaeger, John
author

Kawagata, Shungo
author

Kemo, David
author

Kim, Young-Gyun
author

Kominz, Michelle
author

Lever, Helen
author

Lipp, Julius
author

Marsaglia, Kathleen
author

McHugh, Cecilia
author

Murakoshi, Naomi
author

Ohi, Takeshi
author

Pea, Laura
author

Pollard, Julie
author

Richaud, Mathieu
author

Slagle, Angela
author

Suto, Itsuki
author

Tanabe, Susumu
author

Tinto, Kirsteen
author

Uramoto, Goichiro
author

Yoshimura, Toshihiro
author

Identification:
IODP Expedition 317; exploring the record of sea-level change off New Zealand
2011
Scientific Drilling
Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International, Sapporo; Washington, DC, International
12
4-14
Expedition 317 investigated the record of global sea-level change (eustasy) within continental margin sedimentary sequences and how eustasy interacts with local forcing to produce preserved sedimentary architectures. The Canterbury Basin, on the eastern margin of the South Island of New Zealand, was selected to study these complex interactions because of high rates of Neogene sediment supply from the uplifting Southern Alps. This sediment input results in a high-frequency ( approximately 0.1-0.5 My periods) record of depositional cyclicity that is modulated by the presence of strong ocean currents. The expedition recovered sediments as old as Eocene but focused on the sequence stratigraphy of the late Miocene to Recent, when global sea-level change was dominated by glacioeustasy. A transect of three sites was drilled on the continental shelf (Sites U1353, U1354, and U1351), plus one on the continental slope (Site U1352). The transect samples the shallow-water environment most directly affected by relative sea-level change. Lithologic boundaries, provisionally correlative with seismic sequence boundaries, have been identified in cores from each site. Continental slope Site U1352 provides a record of ocean circulation and fronts during the last approximately 35 My. The early Oligocene ( approximately 30 Ma) Marshall Paraconformity was the deepest target of Expedition 317 and is hypothesized to represent intensified current erosion or non-deposition associated with the initiation of thermohaline circulation in the region. Expedition 317 involved operational challenges for JOIDES Resolution, including shallow-water, continental-shelf drilling and deep penetrations. Despite these challenges, Expedition 317 set a number of records for scientific ocean drilling penetration and water-depth.
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-44.4600
West:171.4000East: 172.0200
South:-44.5700

Stratigraphy; Australasia; boreholes; Canterbury Basin; Cenozoic; continental margin; cores; Expedition 317; geophysical methods; geophysical profiles; geophysical surveys; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; IODP Site U1351; IODP Site U1352; IODP Site U1353; IODP Site U1354; lithostratigraphy; marine sediments; New Zealand; Pacific Ocean; Quaternary; sea-level changes; sediments; seismic methods; seismic profiles; sequence stratigraphy; South Island; South Pacific; Southwest Pacific; surveys; Tertiary; unconformities; vertical seismic profiles; West Pacific;

.