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Site U1334

Site U1334
Site U1334
Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Site U1334 (7°59.998?N, 131°58.408?W; 4799 meters below sea level [mbsl]) (Fig. F1; Table T1) is located ~380 km southeast of previously drilled Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 1218 (~42 Ma crust) in the central area drilled during the Pacific Equatorial Age Transect (PEAT) program (IODP Expedition 320/321). Site U1334 (~38 Ma crust) is situated ~100 km north of the Clipperton Fracture Zone on abyssal hill topography draped with ~280 m sediment (Fig. F2). The fabric of the abyssal hills within the sites is oriented either due north or slightly east of due north.

Water depth in the vicinity of Site U1334 ranges between 5.0 and 5.1 km for the depressions between the abyssal hills. The abyssal hills range between 4.70 and 4.85 km water depth and generally show a thicker and more consistent sediment cover than the basins. In fact, a significant amount of the bathymetric difference between hills and basins is controlled by the amount of sediment cover. The comparison of sediment thickness and clarity of seismic sections led us to select a location on the middle elevation of one of the abyssal plateaus.

Site U1334 sediments were estimated to have been deposited on top of late middle Eocene crust with an age of ~38 Ma and target the events bracketing the Eocene–Oligocene transition with the specific aim of recovering carbonate-bearing sediments of latest Eocene age prior to a large deepening of the calcium carbonate compensation depth (CCD) that occurred during this greenhouse to icehouse transition (Kennett and Shackleton, 1976; Miller et al., 1991; Zachos et al., 1996; Coxall et al., 2005). The Eocene–Oligocene transition experienced the most dramatic deepening of the Pacific CCD during the Paleogene (van Andel, 1975), which has now been shown by Coxall et al. (2005) to coincide with a rapid stepwise increase in benthic oxygen stable isotope ratios, interpreted to reflect a combination of growth of the Antarctic ice sheet and decrease in deepwater temperatures (DeConto et al., 2008; Liu et al., 2009).
1-116
Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International, Inc
Pälike, Heiko
b9bf7798-ad8c-479b-8487-dd9a30a61fa5
Nishi, Hiroshi
8f3b93ee-0878-4e32-afe1-1d8192f09e07
Lyle, Mitchell
679ab0ed-6986-4198-b8fa-ea80793df449
Raffi, Isabella
ae99d733-dc7b-4580-95ee-f3426a6cfafb
Gamage, Kusali
7d5669f2-acf0-497e-ba4f-d1ca2615a56a
Klaus, Adam
0efdbb3a-0202-4753-b93b-c8b15a86b857
Pälike, Heiko
b9bf7798-ad8c-479b-8487-dd9a30a61fa5
Nishi, Hiroshi
8f3b93ee-0878-4e32-afe1-1d8192f09e07
Lyle, Mitchell
679ab0ed-6986-4198-b8fa-ea80793df449
Raffi, Isabella
ae99d733-dc7b-4580-95ee-f3426a6cfafb
Gamage, Kusali
7d5669f2-acf0-497e-ba4f-d1ca2615a56a
Klaus, Adam
0efdbb3a-0202-4753-b93b-c8b15a86b857

Pälike, Heiko, Nishi, Hiroshi, Lyle, Mitchell, Raffi, Isabella, Gamage, Kusali and Klaus, Adam (2010) Site U1334. In Proceedings of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program, Volume 320/321. Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International, Inc. pp. 1-116 . (doi:10.2204/iodp.proc.320321.106.2010).

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Site U1334 (7°59.998?N, 131°58.408?W; 4799 meters below sea level [mbsl]) (Fig. F1; Table T1) is located ~380 km southeast of previously drilled Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 1218 (~42 Ma crust) in the central area drilled during the Pacific Equatorial Age Transect (PEAT) program (IODP Expedition 320/321). Site U1334 (~38 Ma crust) is situated ~100 km north of the Clipperton Fracture Zone on abyssal hill topography draped with ~280 m sediment (Fig. F2). The fabric of the abyssal hills within the sites is oriented either due north or slightly east of due north.

Water depth in the vicinity of Site U1334 ranges between 5.0 and 5.1 km for the depressions between the abyssal hills. The abyssal hills range between 4.70 and 4.85 km water depth and generally show a thicker and more consistent sediment cover than the basins. In fact, a significant amount of the bathymetric difference between hills and basins is controlled by the amount of sediment cover. The comparison of sediment thickness and clarity of seismic sections led us to select a location on the middle elevation of one of the abyssal plateaus.

Site U1334 sediments were estimated to have been deposited on top of late middle Eocene crust with an age of ~38 Ma and target the events bracketing the Eocene–Oligocene transition with the specific aim of recovering carbonate-bearing sediments of latest Eocene age prior to a large deepening of the calcium carbonate compensation depth (CCD) that occurred during this greenhouse to icehouse transition (Kennett and Shackleton, 1976; Miller et al., 1991; Zachos et al., 1996; Coxall et al., 2005). The Eocene–Oligocene transition experienced the most dramatic deepening of the Pacific CCD during the Paleogene (van Andel, 1975), which has now been shown by Coxall et al. (2005) to coincide with a rapid stepwise increase in benthic oxygen stable isotope ratios, interpreted to reflect a combination of growth of the Antarctic ice sheet and decrease in deepwater temperatures (DeConto et al., 2008; Liu et al., 2009).

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Published date: October 2010

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 170025
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/170025
PURE UUID: 531e73b6-4884-478e-b711-1e1729b8d4c9

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Date deposited: 04 Jan 2011 16:13
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:22

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Contributors

Author: Heiko Pälike
Author: Hiroshi Nishi
Author: Mitchell Lyle
Author: Isabella Raffi
Author: Kusali Gamage
Author: Adam Klaus

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