Wheat, C. Geoffrey et al. (2012): CORK-Lite; bringing legacy boreholes back to life

Leg/Site/Hole:
IODP 336
IODP 336 U1383
Identifier:
2013-017871
georefid

10.2204/iodp.sd.14.05.2012
doi

Creator:
Wheat, C. Geoffrey
University of Alaska-Fairbanks, Global Undersea Research Unit, Fairbanks, Ak, United States
author

Edwards, Katrina J.
University of Southern California, United States
author

Pettigrew, Tom
Pettigrew Engineering, United States
author

Jannasch, Hans W.
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, United States
author

Becker, Keir
University of Miami, United States
author

Davis, Earl E.
Geological Survey of Canada, Canada
author

Villinger, Heiner
University of Bremen, Germany
author

Bach, Wolfgang
author

Identification:
CORK-Lite; bringing legacy boreholes back to life
2012
Scientific Drilling
Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International, Sapporo; Washington, DC, International
14
39-43
An essential aspect of the forty years of deep-sea scientific drilling has been to maximize the scientific return during each expedition while preserving samples for future investigations. This philosophy also extends to borehole design, providing the community with tens of cased legacy boreholes that penetrate into the basaltic crust, each ripe for future investigations of crustal properties and experiments to determine crustal processes (Edwards et al., 2012a). During Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 336 to North Pond on the western flank of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge at 22 degrees N, Hole U1383B (Fig. 1) was planned to be a deep hole, but was abandoned when a 14.75-inch tri-cone bit catastrophically failed at 89.9 meters below the seafloor (mbsf) (Expedition 336 Scientists, 2012). This resulted in about 36 meters of open hole below casing, similar to conditions within tens of legacy boreholes. Because the overall experiment required a return to the "natural" hydrologic state in basaltic basement, it was critical to seal the hole to prevent a hydrologic "short circuit". Thus, a plan emerged at sea to seal Hole U1383B with a simplified Circulation Obviation Retrofit Kit (CORK) termed "CORK-Lite" that could be deployed by a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) on a planned dive series five months later. To prepare for this deployment, a standard ROV platform that is used with CORKs was modified to be self-guiding in the re-entry cone and deployed. The next step was to design a CORK system that could seal the borehole, yet be physically manageable with an ROV, and be ready for shipping and deployment within three months. Several key functional aspects dictated the design of the new CORK-Lite (Table 1).
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:22.4808
West:-46.0310East: -46.0310
South:22.4808

Oceanography; Atlantic Ocean; boreholes; Circulation Obviation Retrofit Kits; CORK; crust; drilling; Expedition 336; instruments; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; IODP Site U1383; marine drilling; Mid-Atlantic Ridge; North Atlantic; Ocean Drilling Program; oceanic crust;

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