Ferdelman, Timothy G. et al. (2005): Expedition 307 summary

Leg/Site/Hole:
IODP 307
Identifier:
2007-087765
georefid

10.2204/iodp.proc.307.101.2006
doi

Creator:
Ferdelman, Timothy G.
Max-Planck-Institute of Marine Microbiology, Department of Biogeochemistry, Bremen, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Kano, Akihiro
Hiroshima University, Japan
author

Williams, Trevor
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, United States
author

Henriet, J. P.
Japan Agency of Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Japan
author

Gaillot, Philippe
University of Tsukuba, Japan
author

Abe, Kohei
Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, United States
author

Andres, Miriam S.
University of Copenhagen, Denmark
author

Bjerager, Morten
University of Nebraska Lincoln, United States
author

Browning, Emily L.
Cardiff University, United Kingdom
author

Cragg, Barry A.
Universitat de Barcelona, Spain
author

De Mol, Ben
Universiteit Gent, Belgium
author

Foubert, Anneleen
Toyama University, Japan
author

Frank, Tracy D.
University of Hawaii at Manoa, United States
author

Fuwa, Yuji
University of Missouri-Rolla, United States
author

Gharib, Jamshid J.
National Oceanography Centre, United Kingdom
author

Gregg, Jay M.
Universite de Provence, France
author

Huvenne, Veerle Ann Ida
Chengdu University of Technology, China
author

Leonide, Philippe
GeoForschungsZentrum Potsdam, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Li Xianghui
Rice University, United States
author

Mangelsdorf, Kai
University of Georgia, United States
author

Novosel, Ivana
Kanazawa Gakuin University, Japan
author

Sakai, Saburo
University of Rhode Island, United States
author

Samarkin, Vladimir A.
Hiroshima University, Japan
author

Sasaki, Keiichi
Geological Survey of Japan, Japan
author

Spivack, Arthur J.
Universitaet Erlangen-Nuernberg, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Takashima, Chizuru
Hiroshima University, Japan
author

Tanaka, Akiko
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, United States
author

Titschack, Juergen
Japan Agency of Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Japan
author

Identification:
Expedition 307 summary
2005
In: Ferdelman, Timothy G., Kano, Akihiro, Williams, Trevor, Henriet, J. P., Gaillot, Philippe, Abe, Kohei, Andres, Miriam S., Bjerager, Morten, Browning, Emily L., Cragg, Barry A., De Mol, Ben, Foubert, Anneleen, Frank, Tracy D., Fuwa, Yuji, Gharib, Jamshid J., Gregg, Jay M., Huvenne, Veerle Ann Ida, Leonide, Philippe, Li Xianghui, Mangelsdorf, Kai, Novosel, Ivana, Sakai, Saburo, Samarkin, Vladimir A., Sasaki, Keiichi, Spivack, Arthur J., Takashima, Chizuru, Tanaka, Akiko, Titschack, Juergen, Proceedings of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; modern carbonate mounds; Porcupine drilling; Expedition 307 of the riserless drilling platform from Dublin, Ireland, to Mobile, Alabama; Sites U1316-U1318; 25 April-30 May 2005
IODP Management International, Washington, DC, United States
307
Challenger Mound is a prominent mound structure covered with dead cold-water coral rubble on the southwest Irish continental margin and was the focus of 12 days of scientific drilling aboard the JOIDES Resolution during Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 307. Specific drilling objectives included the following: 1. Establish whether the mound roots on a carbonate hardground of microbial origin and whether past geofluid migration events acted as a prime trigger for mound genesis. 2. Define the relationship between mound initiation, mound growth phases, and global oceanographic events. 3. Analyze geochemical and microbiological profiles that define the sequence of microbial communities and geomicrobial reactions throughout the drilled sections. 4. Obtain high-resolution paleoclimatic records from the mound section using a wide range of geochemical and isotopic proxies. 5. Describe the stratigraphic, lithologic, and diagenetic characteristics, including timing of key mound-building phases, for establishing a depositional model of cold-water carbonate mounds and for investigating how they resemble ancient mud mounds. Two further sites, located down- and upslope of Challenger Mound, completed a transect to (1) constrain the stratigraphic framework of the slope/mound system, (2) identify and correlate erosional surfaces observed in seismic sections, and (3) investigate potential gas accumulation in the sediments underlying the mound. Drilling revealed that the mound rests on a sharp erosional boundary. Drift sediments below this erosion surface consist of glauconitic and silty sandstone of early-middle Miocene age. The Miocene strata end abruptly in a firmground that is overlain by the late Pliocene-Pleistocene mound succession. The mound flanks are draped by late Pleistocene (<0.26 Ma) silty clay deposits that frequently contain dropstones. The mound succession mainly consists of floatstone and rudstone formed of fine sediments and cold-water branching corals. Pronounced recurring cycles of several meter scales were recognized in carbonate content and color changes and are most probably associated with Pleistocene glacial-interglacial cycles. A role for hydrocarbon fluid flow in the initial growth phase of Challenger Mound is not obvious either from lithostratigraphy or from initial geochemistry and microbiology results. We found no significant quantities of gas in the mound or in the subbasal mound sediments, nor were carbonate hardgrounds observed at the mound base. Microbial effects on mound and submound diagenesis are subtle. We detected the methane-sulfate transition only in the Miocene silt and sandstones underlying the mound, where methane concentrations and prokaryotic cell abundances increase with increasing depth. In the mound succession, interstitial water profiles of sulfate, alkalinity, Mg, and Sr suggest a tight coupling between carbonate diagenesis and microbial sulfate reduction. Decomposition of organic matter by sulfate reduction (organoclastic) may drive the biogeochemical processes of mineralogical transformation by (1) producing CO (sub 2) , which enhances aragonite dissolution and (2) increasing overall dissolved inorganic carbon concentration, which allows (calcium-rich) precipitation. Furthermore, periods of rapid sedimentation overlying hiatuses left distinct signals in the interstitial water chemistry of the Pleistocene sediments that surround and partially bury the mounds of Porcupine Seabight.
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:51.2700
West:-11.4400East: -11.3300
South:51.2200

Stratigraphy; Atlantic Ocean; Cenozoic; continental margin; diagenesis; erosion; Europe; Expedition 307; geochemistry; geomicrobiology; geophysical methods; geophysical profiles; geophysical surveys; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; Ireland; lithostratigraphy; Miocene; Neogene; North Atlantic; paleo-oceanography; paleoclimatology; Pleistocene; Porcupine Basin; Quaternary; reef environment; sedimentary rocks; seismic methods; seismic profiles; surveys; Tertiary; Western Europe;

.