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Expedition 390 Preliminary Report: South Atlantic transect 1

Expedition 390 Preliminary Report: South Atlantic transect 1
Expedition 390 Preliminary Report: South Atlantic transect 1

The South Atlantic Transect (SAT) is a multidisciplinary scientific ocean drilling project that comprises four International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) expeditions: engineering Expeditions 390C and 395E as well as Expeditions 390 and 393. Altogether, the expeditions aim to recover complete sedimentary sections and the upper 100–350 m of the underlying oceanic crust along a slow/intermediate spreading rate Mid-Atlantic Ridge crustal flow line at ~31°S. The sediments along this transect were originally spot cored more than 50 y ago during Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 3 (December 1968–January 1969) to help verify the theories of seafloor spreading and plate tectonics. Given dramatic advances in drilling technology and analytical capabilities since Leg 3, many high-priority scientific objectives can be addressed by revisiting the transect. The SAT expeditions target six primary sites on 7, 15, 31, 49, and 61 Ma ocean crust, which fill critical gaps in our sampling of intact in situ ocean crust with regards to crustal age, spreading rate, and sediment thickness. Drilling these sites is required to investigate the history of the low-temperature hydrothermal interactions between the aging ocean crust and the evolving South Atlantic Ocean and quantify past hydrothermal contributions to global biogeochemical cycles. Samples from the transect of the previously unexplored sediment- and basalt-hosted deep biosphere beneath the South Atlantic Gyre are essential to refining global biomass estimates and examining microbial ecosystems’ responses to variable conditions in a low-energy gyre and aging ocean crust. The transect is located near World Ocean Circulation Experiment Line A10, providing access to records of carbonate chemistry and deepwater mass properties across the western South Atlantic through key Cenozoic intervals of elevated atmospheric CO2 and rapid climate change. Reconstruction of the history of the deep western boundary current and deepwater formation in the Atlantic basins will yield crucial data to test hypotheses regarding the role of evolving thermohaline circulation patterns in climate change and the effects of tectonic gateways and climate on ocean acidification.

Engineering Expeditions 390C and 395E cored a single hole through the sediment/basement interface with the advanced piston corer/extended core barrel system at five of the six primary proposed SAT sites and installed a reentry system with casing either into basement or within 10 m of basement at each of those five sites. Expedition 390 (7 April–7 June 2022) conducted operations at three of the SAT sites, recovering 700 m of core (77% recovery) over 30.3 days of on-site operations. Sediment coring, basement drilling, and logging were conducted at two sites on 61 Ma crust, and sediment coring was completed at the 7 Ma crust site. At Site U1557 on 61 Ma crust, the drill bit was deposited on the seafloor prior to downhole logging, leaving Hole U1557D available for future deepening and to establish a legacy borehole for basement hydrothermal and microbiological experiments. Expedition 390 scientists additionally described, and analyzed data from, 792 m of core collected during Expeditions 390C and 395E. Expedition 393 plans to operate at four sites, conducting basement drilling and downhole logging at the 7 Ma site, in addition to sediment coring, basement drilling, and logging at the sites intermediate in age.

International Ocean Discovery Program
Coggon, Rosalind M.
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Sylvan, Jason B.
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Teagle, Damon A.H.
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Reece, Julia
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Christeson, Gail L.
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Estes, Emily R.
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Williams, Trevor J.
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Aizawa, Masataka
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Borelli, Chiara
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Bridges, Joshua D.
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Carter, Elliot J.
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Dinarès-Turell, Jaume
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Estep, Justin D.
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Gilhooly, William P.
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Grant, Lewis
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Kaplan, Michael R.
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Kempton, Pamela D.
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Kurz, Walter
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Lowery, Christopher M.
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McIntyre, Andrew
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Prakasam, Muthusamy
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Routledge, Claire M.
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Slagle, Angela L.
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Takada, Mako
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Tamborrino, Leonardo
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Tian, Liyan
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Yang, Kiho
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Yu, Tiantian
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Garnsworthy, Marlo
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Guertin, Laura
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Expedition 390 participants
Coggon, Rosalind M.
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Sylvan, Jason B.
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Teagle, Damon A.H.
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Reece, Julia
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Christeson, Gail L.
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Estes, Emily R.
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Williams, Trevor J.
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Aizawa, Masataka
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Borelli, Chiara
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Bridges, Joshua D.
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Carter, Elliot J.
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Dinarès-Turell, Jaume
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Estep, Justin D.
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Gilhooly, William P.
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Grant, Lewis
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Kaplan, Michael R.
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Kempton, Pamela D.
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Kurz, Walter
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Lowery, Christopher M.
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McIntyre, Andrew
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Prakasam, Muthusamy
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Routledge, Claire M.
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Slagle, Angela L.
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Takada, Mako
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Tamborrino, Leonardo
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Tian, Liyan
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Yang, Kiho
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Yu, Tiantian
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Garnsworthy, Marlo
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Guertin, Laura
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Coggon, Rosalind M., Sylvan, Jason B., Teagle, Damon A.H., Reece, Julia, Christeson, Gail L., Estes, Emily R. and Williams, Trevor J. , Expedition 390 participants (2022) Expedition 390 Preliminary Report: South Atlantic transect 1 International Ocean Discovery Program 62pp. (doi:10.14379/iodp.pr.390.2022).

Record type: Monograph (Project Report)

Abstract

The South Atlantic Transect (SAT) is a multidisciplinary scientific ocean drilling project that comprises four International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) expeditions: engineering Expeditions 390C and 395E as well as Expeditions 390 and 393. Altogether, the expeditions aim to recover complete sedimentary sections and the upper 100–350 m of the underlying oceanic crust along a slow/intermediate spreading rate Mid-Atlantic Ridge crustal flow line at ~31°S. The sediments along this transect were originally spot cored more than 50 y ago during Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 3 (December 1968–January 1969) to help verify the theories of seafloor spreading and plate tectonics. Given dramatic advances in drilling technology and analytical capabilities since Leg 3, many high-priority scientific objectives can be addressed by revisiting the transect. The SAT expeditions target six primary sites on 7, 15, 31, 49, and 61 Ma ocean crust, which fill critical gaps in our sampling of intact in situ ocean crust with regards to crustal age, spreading rate, and sediment thickness. Drilling these sites is required to investigate the history of the low-temperature hydrothermal interactions between the aging ocean crust and the evolving South Atlantic Ocean and quantify past hydrothermal contributions to global biogeochemical cycles. Samples from the transect of the previously unexplored sediment- and basalt-hosted deep biosphere beneath the South Atlantic Gyre are essential to refining global biomass estimates and examining microbial ecosystems’ responses to variable conditions in a low-energy gyre and aging ocean crust. The transect is located near World Ocean Circulation Experiment Line A10, providing access to records of carbonate chemistry and deepwater mass properties across the western South Atlantic through key Cenozoic intervals of elevated atmospheric CO2 and rapid climate change. Reconstruction of the history of the deep western boundary current and deepwater formation in the Atlantic basins will yield crucial data to test hypotheses regarding the role of evolving thermohaline circulation patterns in climate change and the effects of tectonic gateways and climate on ocean acidification.

Engineering Expeditions 390C and 395E cored a single hole through the sediment/basement interface with the advanced piston corer/extended core barrel system at five of the six primary proposed SAT sites and installed a reentry system with casing either into basement or within 10 m of basement at each of those five sites. Expedition 390 (7 April–7 June 2022) conducted operations at three of the SAT sites, recovering 700 m of core (77% recovery) over 30.3 days of on-site operations. Sediment coring, basement drilling, and logging were conducted at two sites on 61 Ma crust, and sediment coring was completed at the 7 Ma crust site. At Site U1557 on 61 Ma crust, the drill bit was deposited on the seafloor prior to downhole logging, leaving Hole U1557D available for future deepening and to establish a legacy borehole for basement hydrothermal and microbiological experiments. Expedition 390 scientists additionally described, and analyzed data from, 792 m of core collected during Expeditions 390C and 395E. Expedition 393 plans to operate at four sites, conducting basement drilling and downhole logging at the 7 Ma site, in addition to sediment coring, basement drilling, and logging at the sites intermediate in age.

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Published date: 1 October 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: National Science Foundation (NSF), United States Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), Japan European Consortium for Ocean Research Drilling (ECORD) Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST), People’s Republic of China Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources (KIGAM) Australia-New Zealand IODP Consortium (ANZIC) Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES), India Funding Information: This publication was prepared by the JOIDES Resolution Science Operator (JRSO) at Texas A&M University (TAMU) as an account of work performed under the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP). This material is based upon work supported by the JRSO, which is a major facility funded by the National Science Foundation Cooperative Agreement Number OCE1326927. Funding for IODP is provided by the following international partners:

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 484720
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/484720
PURE UUID: 4fd1ea74-65ec-47fd-a1d6-54b5ef92458e
ORCID for Rosalind M. Coggon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9228-9707
ORCID for Damon A.H. Teagle: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4416-8409

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Date deposited: 20 Nov 2023 17:48
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:24

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Contributors

Author: Jason B. Sylvan
Author: Julia Reece
Author: Gail L. Christeson
Author: Emily R. Estes
Author: Trevor J. Williams
Author: Masataka Aizawa
Author: Chiara Borelli
Author: Joshua D. Bridges
Author: Elliot J. Carter
Author: Jaume Dinarès-Turell
Author: Justin D. Estep
Author: William P. Gilhooly
Author: Lewis Grant
Author: Michael R. Kaplan
Author: Pamela D. Kempton
Author: Walter Kurz
Author: Christopher M. Lowery
Author: Andrew McIntyre
Author: Muthusamy Prakasam
Author: Claire M. Routledge
Author: Angela L. Slagle
Author: Mako Takada
Author: Leonardo Tamborrino
Author: Liyan Tian
Author: Kiho Yang
Author: Tiantian Yu
Author: Marlo Garnsworthy
Author: Laura Guertin
Corporate Author: Expedition 390 participants

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