Edwards, Katrina J. et al. (2012): Expedition 336 summary

Leg/Site/Hole:
IODP 336
IODP 336 395
IODP 336 U1382
IODP 336 U1383
Identifier:
2013-006050
georefid

10.2204/iodp.proc.336.101.2012
doi

Creator:
Edwards, Katrina J.
University of Southern California, Department of Biological Sciences, Los Angeles, CA, United States
author

Bach, Wolfgang
University of Bremen, Germany
author

Klaus, Adam
Texas A&M University, United States
author

Anderson, Louise
University of Leicester, United Kingdom
author

Backert, Nicolas
Universite des Sciences et Technologies de Lille 1, France
author

Becker, Keir
University of Miami, United States
author

Griffin, Dale W.
U. S. Geological Survey, United States
author

Haddad, Amanda G.
Geological Survey of Japan, Japan
author

Harigane, Yumiko
Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Japan
author

Hirayama, Hisako
Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, United States
author

Hulme, Samuel M.
Universitetet i Bergen, Norway
author

Jorgensen, Steffen Leth
University of Rhode Island, United States
author

Insua, Tania Lado
Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, France
author

Le Campion, Paul
Aarhus University, Denmark
author

Mills, Heath J.
Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources, South Korea
author

Nakamura, Kentaro
University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
author

Orcutt, Beth N.
Institut Francais de Recherche pour l'Exploitation de la Mer, France
author

Park, Young-Soo
University of Delaware, United States
author

Rennie, Victoria
Osaka University, Japan
author

Rouxel, Olivier
California Institute of Technology, United States
author

Russel, Joseph A.
Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China
author

Sakata, Kasumi
University of Alaska at Fairbanks, United States
author

Salas, Everett C.
University of Bremen, Germany
author

Wang Fengping
Texas A&M University, United States
author

Wheat, C. Geoffrey
University of Leicester, United Kingdom
author

Identification:
Expedition 336 summary
2012
In: Edwards, Katrina J., Bach, Wolfgang, Klaus, Adam, Anderson, Louise, Backert, Nicolas, Becker, Keir, Griffin, Dale W., Haddad, Amanda G., Harigane, Yumiko, Hirayama, Hisako, Hulme, Samuel M., Jorgensen, Steffen Leth, Insua, Tania Lado, Le Campion, Paul, Mills, Heath J., Nakamura, Kentaro, Orcutt, Beth N., Park, Young-Soo, Rennie, Victoria, Rouxel, Olivier, Russel, Joseph A., Sakata, Kasumi, Salas, Everett C., Wang Fengping, Wheat, C. Geoffrey, Proceedings of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; Mid-Atlantic Ridge microbiology; initiation of long-term coupled microbiological, geochemical, and hydrological experimentation within the seafloor at North Pond, western flank of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge; Expedition 336 of the riserless drilling platform; Bridgetown, Barbados, to Ponta Delgada, Azores (Portugal), Sites 395 and U1382-U1384, 16 September-16 November 2011
IODP Management International, Washington, DC, United States
336
Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 336 successfully initiated subseafloor observatory science at a young mid-ocean-ridge flank setting. All of the drilled sites are located in the North Pond region of the Atlantic Ocean (22 degrees 45'N, 46 degrees 05'W) in 4414-4483 m water depth. This area is known from previous ocean drilling and site survey investigations as a site of particularly vigorous circulation of seawater in permeable 8 Ma basaltic basement underlying a <300 m thick sedimentary pile. Understanding how this seawater circulation affects microbial and geochemical processes in the uppermost basement was the primary science objective of Expedition 336. Basement was cored and wireline-logged in IODP Holes U1382A and U1383C. From Hole U1382A, which is only 50 m west of Deep Sea Drilling Project Hole 395A, we recovered 32 m of upper oceanic crust between 110 and 210 meters below seafloor (mbsf). Core recovery in basement was 32%, yielding a number of volcanic flow units with distinct geochemical and petrographic characteristics. A unit of sedimentary breccia containing clasts of basalt, gabbroic rocks, and mantle peridotite was intercalated between two volcanic flow units and was interpreted as a rock slide deposit. From Hole U1383C we recovered 50.3 m of core between 69.5 and 331.5 mbsf (19%). The basalts are aphyric to highly plagioclase-olivine-phyric tholeiites that fall on a liquid line of descent controlled by olivine fractionation. They are fresh to moderately altered, with clay minerals (saponite, nontronite, and celadonite), Fe oxyhydroxide, carbonate, and zeolite as secondary phases replacing glass and olivine to variable extents. In addition to traditional downhole logs, we also used a new logging tool for detecting in situ microbial life in ocean floor boreholes-the Deep Exploration Biosphere Investigative tool. Sediment thickness was approximately 90 m at Sites U1382 and U1384 and varied between 38 and 53 m at Site U1383. The sediments are predominantly nannofossil ooze with layers of coarse foraminiferal sand and occasional pebble-sized clasts of basalt, serpentinite, gabbroic rocks, and bivalve debris. The bottommost meters of sections cored with the advanced piston corer feature brown clay. Extended core barrel coring at the sediment/basement interface recovered <1 m of brecciated basalt with micritic limestone. Sediments were intensely sampled for geochemical pore water analyses and microbiological work. In addition, high-resolution measurements of dissolved oxygen concentration were performed on the whole-round sediment cores. Major strides in ridge-flank studies have been made with subseafloor borehole observatories (CORKs) because they facilitate combined hydrological, geochemical, and microbiological studies and controlled experimentation in the subseafloor. During Expedition 336, two fully functional observatories were installed in two newly drilled holes (U1382A and U1383C) and an instrument and sampling string were placed in an existing hole (395A). Although the CORK wellhead in Hole 395A broke off and Hole U1383B was abandoned after a bit failure, these holes and installations are intended for future observatory science targets. The CORK observatory in Hole U1382A has a packer seal in the bottom of the casing and monitors/samples a single zone in uppermost oceanic crust extending from 90 to 210 mbsf. Hole U1383C was equipped with a three-level CORK observatory that spans a zone of thin basalt flows with intercalated limestone ( approximately 70-146 mbsf), a zone of glassy, thin basaltic flows and hyaloclastites (146-200 mbsf), and a lowermost zone ( approximately 200-331.5 mbsf) of more massive pillow flows with occasional hyaloclastites in the upper part.
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:22.4808
West:-46.0454East: -46.0310
South:22.4521

General geochemistry; Solid-earth geophysics; Atlantic Ocean; basalts; basement; biochemistry; boreholes; cores; crust; drilling; DSDP Site 395; Expedition 336; fluid phase; geomicrobiology; igneous rocks; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; IODP Site U1382; IODP Site U1383; marine drilling; marine sediments; Mid-Atlantic Ridge; North Atlantic; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; oceanic crust; physical properties; sea water; sediments; volcanic rocks; well logs;

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