(Table T1) Mineral composition of oriented clay aggregates from ODP Leg 190 sites


Autoria(s): Underwood, Michael B; Steurer, Joan
Cobertura

MEDIAN LATITUDE: 32.659597 * MEDIAN LONGITUDE: 134.567360 * SOUTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 32.578300 * WEST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 134.479480 * NORTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 32.731010 * EAST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 134.665700 * DATE/TIME START: 2000-06-22T22:30:00 * DATE/TIME END: 2000-11-15T13:25:00 * MINIMUM DEPTH, sediment/rock: 1.33 m * MAXIMUM DEPTH, sediment/rock: 672.46 m

Data(s)

19/04/2003

Resumo

Three sites were cored on the landward slope of the Nankai margin of southwest Japan during Leg 190 of the Ocean Drilling Program. Sites 1175 and 1176 are located in a trench-slope basin that was constructed during the early Pleistocene (~1 Ma) by frontal offscraping of coarse-grained trench-wedge deposits. Rapid uplift elevated the substrate above the calcite compensation depth and rerouted a transverse canyon-channel system that had delivered most of the trench sediment during the late Pliocene (1.06-1.95 Ma). The basin's depth is now ~3000 to 3020 m below sea level. Clay-sized detritus (<2 µm) did not change significantly in composition during the transition from trench-floor to slope-basin environment. Relative mineral abundances for the two slope-basin sites average 36-37 wt% illite, 25 wt% smectite, 22-24 wt% chlorite, and 15-16 wt% quartz. Site 1178 is located higher up the landward slope at a water depth of 1741 m, ~70 km from the present-day deformation front. There is a pronounced discontinuity ~200 m below seafloor between muddy slope-apron deposits (Quaternary-late Miocene) and sandier trench-wedge deposits (late Miocene; 6.8-9.63 Ma). Clay minerals change downsection from an illite-chlorite assemblage (similar to Sites 1175 and 1176) to one that contains substantial amounts of smectite (average = 45 wt% of the clay-sized fraction; maximum = 76 wt%). Mixing in the water column homogenizes fine-grained suspended sediment eroded from the Izu-Bonin volcanic arc, the Izu-Honshu collision zone, and the Outer Zone of Kyushu and Shikoku, but the spatial balance among those contributors has shifted through time. Closure of the Central America Seaway at ~3 Ma was particularly important because it triggered intensification of the Kuroshio Current. With stronger and deeper flow of surface water toward the northeast, the flux of smectite from the Izu-Bonin volcanic arc was dampened and more detrital illite and chlorite were transported into the Shikoku-Nankai system from the Outer Zone of Japan.

Formato

text/tab-separated-values, 1924 data points

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.779595

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.779595

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Underwood, Michael B; Steurer, Joan (2003): Composition and sources of clay from the trench slope and shallow accretionary prism of Nankai Trough. In: Mikada, H; Moore, GF; Taira, A; Becker, K; Moore, JC; Klaus, A (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 190/196, 1-28, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.sr.190196.206.2003

Palavras-Chave #190-1175A; 190-1176A; 190-1178A; 190-1178B; Biscaye weighing factor (Biscaye, 1965); Chlorite; Chlorite (peak area); Clay minerals; DEPTH, sediment/rock; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Event label; Illite; Illite (peak area); Joides Resolution; Leg190; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; ODP sample designation; Philippine Sea; Quartz; Quartz (peak area); Sample code/label; Sample comment; Singular value decomposition (SDV) factor (Underwood, 2003); Smectite; Smectite (peak area); X-ray diffraction (XRD)
Tipo

Dataset