Feary, David A. et al. (2004): Leg 182 synthesis; exposed secrets of the Great Australian Bight

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 182
Identifier:
2005-041661
georefid

10.2973/odp.proc.sr.182.017.2004
doi

Creator:
Feary, David A.
National Research Council, Board on Earth Sciences and Resources, Washington, DC, United States
author

Hine, Albert C.
Australian Geological Survey Organisation, Australia
author

James, Noel P.
Texas A&M University, United States
author

Malone, Mitchell J.
Eidgenoessische Technische Hochschule-Zentrum, Switzerland
author

Identification:
Leg 182 synthesis; exposed secrets of the Great Australian Bight
2004
In: Hine, Albert C., Feary, David A., Malone, Mitchell J., Andres, Miriam, Betzler, Christian, Brooks, Gregg R., Brunner, Charlotte A., Fuller, Michael, Molina Garza, Roberto S., Holbourn, Ann E., Huuse, Mads, Isern, Alexandra R., James, Noel P., Ladner, Bryan C., Li, Qianyu, Machiyama, Hideaki, Mallinson, David J., Matsuda, Hiroki, Mitterer, Richard M., Robin, Cecile, Russell, Joellen L., Shafik, Samir, Simo, J. A., Smart, Peter L., Spence, Guy H., Surlyk, Finn C., Swart, Peter K., Wortmann, Ulrich G., Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program; scientific results; Great Australian Bight; Cenozoic cool-water carbonates; covering Leg 182 of the cruises of the drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution; Wellington, New Zealand, to Fremantle, Australia; Sites 1126-1134, 8 October-7 December 1998
Texas A&M University, Ocean Drilling Program, College Station, TX, United States
182
During Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 182, nine sites were drilled across the southern Australian margin in the Great Australian Bight, with the objective of obtaining a more detailed understanding of cool-water carbonate depositional processes and global environmental change in mid-latitude settings. Drilling results provide insights into the temporal and spatial aspects of cool-water carbonate deposition in shelf edge and slope environments. Drilling showed that the spectacular prograding clinoform sequence forming the upper slope and outermost shelf of the Great Australian Bight margin was rapidly deposited during the Pleistocene. Meter-scale lithologic cycles rapidly accumulated in response to orbitally forced sea level fluctuations. Skeletal elements within these wackestone to packstone, coarsening-upward cycles consist of tunicate spicules, brown bioclasts, bryozoan fragments, and red coralline algal debris-a heterozoan assemblage typical of cool-water carbonates. The high accumulation rates, comparable to rates in warm-water carbonate environments, reflect partitioning of sedimentation between the shelf and slope as high wave energy from the Southern Ocean interacted with sea level fluctuations to generate vigorous off-shelf transport. Mound features visible on seismic reflection data on and underlying the uppermost slope throughout the Pleistocene of the central and western Great Australian Bight are in situ bryozoan reef mounds. These mounds consist of diverse suites of bryozoans, together with coralline algae, echinoid spines, and benthic foraminifers, in a mudstone to packstone matrix. Seismic and isotopic data indicate that mounds developed cyclically in response to glacial-interglacial productivity cycles. Increased upwelling during sea level lowstands promoted active mound growth, in contrast to the thin mud accumulations that draped inactive mounds during highstands. Such mounds have not previously been described from the "modern" ocean and provide unlithified analogs for similar features that occur in the mid- to late Paleozoic rock record. The interaction of high-salinity (up to 106) interstitial brines with abundant organic matter within the upper parts of the sedimentary succession produced high concentrations of methane (up to 50%) and hydrogen sulfide (up to 15%). This unusual chemical environment lead to extensive carbonate recrystallization and dissolution of high-magnesium calcite and the precipitation of low-magnesium calcite and dolomite. In certain environments, therefore, cool-water carbonates may be at least as diagenetically active as their warm-water counterparts. The brines probably formed in shallow evaporative pools and lagoons on the shelf during sea level lowstands, seeped into the underlying sediments, and flowed toward the upper slope. Thermodynamic considerations suggest that H2S and CH4 disseminated gas hydrates might be present within the Great Australian Bight succession.
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-33.1720
West:127.1500East: 128.5500
South:-34.2330

Oceanography; Stratigraphy; Australasia; Australia; biostratigraphy; carbonate sediments; carbonates; Cenozoic; continental shelf; cores; depositional environment; geophysical methods; geophysical profiles; geophysical surveys; Great Australian Bight; Indian Ocean; Leg 182; lithostratigraphy; marine environment; marine sediments; Ocean Drilling Program; paleo-oceanography; paleoclimatology; sedimentation rates; sediments; seismic methods; seismic profiles; shelf environment; surveys;

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