Fergusson, Christopher L. (2005): Provenance of Miocene-Pleistocene turbidite sands and sandstones, Nankai Trough, Ocean Drilling Program Leg 190

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 190
Identifier:
2005-060939
georefid

10.2973/odp.proc.sr.190196.205.2003
doi

Creator:
Fergusson, Christopher L.
University of Wollongong, School of Geosciences, Wollongong, N.S.W., Australia
author

Identification:
Provenance of Miocene-Pleistocene turbidite sands and sandstones, Nankai Trough, Ocean Drilling Program Leg 190
2005
In: Moore, Gregory F., Taira, Asahiko, Klaus, Adam, Becker, Keir, Becker, Luann, Boeckel, Babette, Cragg, Barry A., Dean, P. Allison, Fergusson, Christopher L., Henry, Pierre, Hirano, Satoshi, Hisamitsu, Toshio, Hunze, Sabine, Kastner, Miriam, Maltman, Alex J., Morgan, Julia K., Murakami, Yuki, Saffer, Demian M., Sanchez-Gomez, Mario, Screaton, Elizabeth J., Smith, David C., Spivack, Arthur J., Steurer, Joan F., Tobin, Harold J., Ujiie, Kohtaro, Underwood, Michael B., Wilson, Moyra E. J., Mikada, Hitoshi, Moore, J. Casey, Austin, Gary L., Bangs, Nathan L. B., Bourlange, Sylvain, Broilliard, Julien, Brueckmann, Warner, Corn, Ernest Ray, Davis, Earl E., Flemings, Peter B., Goldberg, David S., Gulick, Sean P. S., Hansen, Martin Bak, Hayward, Nathan, Hills, Denise J., Ienaga, Masanori, Ishiguro, Hiroyasu, Kinoshita, Masataka, Macdonald, Robert D., McNeill, Lisa, Obana, Shinichi, Hong, Ong Swee, Peacock, Sheila, Pettigrew, Thomas L., Saito, Saneatsu, Sawa, Takao, Thaiprasert, Nophawit, Tsurumi, Hikaru, Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program; scientific results; deformation and fluid flow processes in the Nankai Trough accretionary prism; coring, logging while drilling and advanced CORKs covering Legs 190 to 196 of the cruises of the drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution; Sydney, Australia, to Yokohama, Japan, Sites 1173-1178, 23 May-16 July 2000; and Keelung, Taiwan, to Kochi, Japan, Sites 808-1173, 2 May-1 July 2001
Texas A&M University, Ocean Drilling Program, College Station, TX, United States
190/196
During Ocean Drilling Program Leg 190 several turbidite successions in the Nankai Trough were drilled through including Pleistocene trench fill (Sites 1173 and 1174), Pleistocene-Pliocene slope basin deposits and underlying trench fill (Sites 1175 and 1176), Miocene Shikoku Basin deposits (Site 1177), and upper Miocene trench fill (Site 1178). Sands from the Pleistocene trench-fill succession of the Nankai Trough are of mixed derivation with significant monomineralic components (quartz and feldspar) and mafic to intermediate volcanic rock fragments, in addition to sedimentary and less abundant metamorphic detritus. They have a source in the Izu collision zone in central Honshu. Sands from the slope and accreted trench fill at Sites 1175 and 1176 are dominated by quartz with less abundant feldspar, sedimentary rock fragments, and only minor volcanic and metamorphic rock fragments. In contrast to the trench turbidites of Sites 1173 and 1174, these sands are very quartzose with characteristic radiolarian chert fragments. Volcanic rock fragments are mainly of silicic composition. Potential sources of these sands are uplifted subduction complexes of southwest Japan. Sands from the accreted trench turbidites at Site 1178 have clast types similar to those at Sites 1175 and 1176. In contrast, however, framework detrital modes are distinctive, with Site 1178 sands having substantially lower total quartz contents and more abundant fine-grained sedimentary rock fragments. These sands were also probably derived from the island of Shikoku, but their composition indicates that sedimentary rocks were abundant in the source area and these may have been Miocene forearc basin successions that were largely removed by erosion. Erosional remnants of Miocene forearc basin deposits are present on the Kii Peninsula east-northeast of Shikoku. Erosion followed a phase of exhumation of the Shimanto Belt indicated by apatite fission track ages at approximately 10 Ma. Sand in the lower-upper Miocene turbidites of the lower Shikoku Basin section at Site 1177 is more varied in composition, with the upper part of the unit similar to Site 1178 (i.e., rich in sedimentary rock fragments) and the lower part similar to those at Sites 1175 and 1176 (i.e., rich in quartz with some silicic volcanic rock fragments). Sands from the lower part of the Miocene turbidite unit were derived from a continental source with plutonic and volcanic rocks, possibly the inner zone of southwest Japan.
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:32.4500
West:134.0000East: 135.1500
South:31.3000

Sedimentary petrology; Cenozoic; clastic rocks; clastic sediments; grain size; Leg 190; lithostratigraphy; marine sediments; mineral composition; Miocene; Nankai Trough; Neogene; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; Pacific Ocean; Pleistocene; provenance; Quaternary; sand; sandstone; sedimentary rocks; sediments; tectonics; Tertiary; turbidite; West Pacific;

.