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Rheology and Biostratigraphy of the Mariana Serpentine Muds Unravel Mud Volcano Evolution
Author(s) -
Menapace Walter,
Tangunan Deborah,
Maas Michael,
Williams Trevor,
Kopf Achim
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.983
H-Index - 232
eISSN - 2169-9356
pISSN - 2169-9313
DOI - 10.1029/2019jb018265
Subject(s) - forearc , mud volcano , geology , breccia , paleontology , tephra , seafloor spreading , volcano , geochemistry , clastic rock , petrology , subduction , sedimentary rock , tectonics
In late 2016, the IODP Expedition 366 drilled 21 holes on summits and flanks of three serpentinite mud volcanoes (SMVs) of the Mariana Forearc: Yinazao (Blue Moon), Fantangisña (Celestial), and Asùt Tesoru (Big Blue). The drilling reached the forearc sediments underneath the SMVs only at Site U1498 where, according to data from this study, the biostratigraphic age of Fantangisña appears to be well constrained, with a pelagic cover on top of the serpentine mud flows of 0.44 Ma and an age of the forearc sediments of 11.21 Ma. With an estimated age of at least 10.77 Myr this is, to our knowledge, the oldest mud volcano ever dated. To link the age of the edifice with its eruptive dynamics, we performed rheological tests of natural samples of serpentine mud from the Fantangisña SMV for the first time. These experiments not only confirm the highly viscous characteristic of the mud breccia but also identify different muds' mineralogical compositions (i.e., serpentine‐rich vs. serpentine‐poor sediments) and water contents as being responsible for the main rheological variations. The viscosity from the rheological data, together with the physical properties of the mud breccia and the clasts measured onboard IODP366, under several assumptions, allow us to estimate of flow velocities and a depth of the mud source at ∼8.4 km below seafloor. Moreover, comparison of erupted mud breccia volumes from bathymetry, seismic data, and calculations shows how the SMV evolution is linked to episodic events, highlighting that Fantangisña has actively been expelling sediments during 2.41% of its life span.

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