Sample, James C. (1996): Isotopic evidence from authigenic carbonates for rapid upward fluid flow in accretionary wedges

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 146
Identifier:
1996-078410
georefid

10.1130/0091-7613(1996)024<0897:IEFACF>2.3.CO;2
doi

Creator:
Sample, James C.
California State University, Department of Geological Sciences, Long Beach, CA, United States
author

Identification:
Isotopic evidence from authigenic carbonates for rapid upward fluid flow in accretionary wedges
1996
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
24
10
897-900
A comparison of pore fluids and authigenic carbonates sampled by the Ocean Drilling Program from the Nankai, Peru, Barbados, and Cascadia accretionary wedges illustrates significant disequilibria in oxygen isotopes, which in some cases may be related to rapid incursions of fluids along fault conduits in the past. The Peru, Barbados, and Cascadia carbonates have lower than expected delta (super 18) O (sub PDB) (Peedee belemnite) values for the measured downhole temperatures and isotope compositions of the pore fluids. In the Peru wedge the lower values may have resulted from past incursion of meteoric water, but in the Barbados and Cascadia wedges, the low delta (super 18) O (sub PDB) values were caused in part by past incursion of fluids with higher temperatures, probably along fault conduits. The temperature of fluids in the Cascadia wedge may have exceeded 100 degrees C, which is 90 degrees C higher than measured current downhole temperatures. The required high fluid-flow rates suggest a mechanism of seismically induced fluid migration to bring fluids rapidly from depths of greater than 2 km to the surface.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:75.0000
West:-128.4300East: 20.0000
South:-35.0000

Isotope geochemistry; Oceanography; accretionary wedges; Atlantic Ocean; authigenic minerals; Barbados Ridge; carbonates; Cascadia subduction zone; diagenesis; East Pacific; fluid phase; isotope ratios; isotopes; Leg 146; marine sediments; North Atlantic; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; O-18/O-16; Ocean Drilling Program; oxygen; Pacific Ocean; Peru-Chile Trench; sediments; stable isotopes;

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