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  • AGU (American Geophysical Union)  (4)
  • Public Library of Science  (2)
  • GEOMAR Helmholtz-Zentrum für Ozeanforschung  (1)
  • Institut und Museum für Geologie und Paläontologie der Universität Tübingen  (1)
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  • 1
  • 2
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    Institut und Museum für Geologie und Paläontologie der Universität Tübingen
    In:  Tübinger Geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen A, 5 . Institut und Museum für Geologie und Paläontologie der Universität Tübingen, Tübingen, V, 135 pp.
    Publication Date: 2017-11-06
    Description: Der Einfluß lateralen Stresses auf die mechanische Diagenese von marinen Sedimenten kann mithilfe sedimentphysikalischer Daten quantifiziert werden. Beispielhaft wurde dies anhand von Daten aus dem Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) und Ocean Drilling Project (ODP) für den Akkretionskeil des Barbados Ridge Complex durchgeführt. Die Untersuchung erfolgte in drei Schritten. (1) In einer statistischen Untersuchung der umfangreichen sedimentologischen und sedimentphysikalischen Datenbank des DSDP wurden tief enabhängige Funktionen der mechanischen Diagenese für eine Reihe von lithologischen Standardtypen definiert. Diese, als Referenzgröße zur Quantifizierung der tektonischen KonsoHdation in einem rezenten Akkretionskeil benötigten Funktionen, wurden in erster Linie für pelitische und psammitische Sedimente mit geringen Karbonatgehalten entwickelt. Zwei verschiedene Verfahren zur Auswahl von entsprechenden Datensätzen werden beschrieben und die Ergebnisse der statistischen Untersuchung mit den in der Literatur beschriebenen Funktionen verglichen. (2) Die entwickelten Typfunktionen wurden bei der Durchführung eines palinspastischen Rekonstruktionsverfahrens benutzt, mit dem die Entwicklung sedimentphysikalischer Parameter während der initialen Deformationsphase in rezenten Akkretionssystemen modelliert werden konnte. Diese Untersuchung basierte im wesentlichen auf sedimentphysikalischen Daten der DSDP- und ODP-Legs 78A und J 10 (Barbados Ridge Komplex, Kleine Antillen). Durch palinspastische Entzerrung der imbrikierten Schuppung und stratigraphische Rekonstruktion akkretierter "thrust slices" im untersuchten Bereich, entsprechender Relozierung der zugehörigen sedimentphysikalischen Daten und dekompaktive Anpassung an die rekonstruierte Position konnte ein synthetisches prä-akkretionäres Profil der ursprünglichen Porosität rechnerisch modelliert werden. (3) Der Vergleich dieses synthetischen Porositäts-Tiefen-Profils mit charakteristischen Referenzprofilen aus undeformierten Sequenzen unmittelbar vor der Deformationsf ront zeigt eine systematische, lithologisch bestimmte Divergenz. Durch Überarbeitung des Rekonstruktionsverfahrens mithilfe von Stress-PorositätsBeziehungen konnte der relative und absolute Einfluß der lateralen Stresskomponente auf die Konsolidation hemipelagischer Sedimente in diesem Teil des konvergenten Plattenrandes quantifiziert werden.
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2018-03-14
    Description: We report total dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) abundances and isotope ratios, as well as helium isotope ratios (3He/4He), of cold seep fluids sampled at the Costa Rica fore arc in order to evaluate the extent of carbon loss from the submarine segment of the Central America convergent margin. Seep fluids were collected over a 12 month period at Mound 11, Mound 12, and Jaco Scar using copper tubing attached to submarine flux meters operating in continuous pumping mode. The fluids show minimum 3He/4He ratios of 1.3 RA (where RA is air 3He/4He), consistent with a small but discernable contribution of mantle-derived helium. At Mound 11, δ13C∑CO2 values between −23.9‰ and −11.6‰ indicate that DIC is predominantly derived from deep methanogenesis and is carried to the surface by fluids derived from sediments of the subducting slab. In contrast, at Mound 12, most of the ascending dissolved methane is oxidized due to lower flow rates, giving extremely low δ13C∑CO2 values ranging from −68.2‰ to −60.3‰. We estimate that the carbon flux (CO2 plus methane) through submarine fluid venting at the outer fore arc is 8.0 × 105 g C km−1 yr−1, which is virtually negligible compared to the total sedimentary carbon input to the margin and the output at the volcanic front. Unless there is a significant but hitherto unidentified carbon flux at the inner fore arc, the implication is that most of the carbon being subducted in Costa Rica must be transferred to the (deeper) mantle, i.e., beyond the depth of arc magma generation.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: [1] A systematic search for methane-rich fluid seeps at the seafloor was conducted at the Pacific continental margin offshore southern Nicaragua and northern central Costa Rica, a convergent margin characterized by subduction erosion. More than 100 fluid seeps were discovered using a combination of multibeam bathymetry, side-scan sonar imagery, TV-sled observations, and sampling. This corresponds, on average, to a seep site every 4 km along the continental slope. In the northwestern part of the study area, subduction of oceanic crust formed at the East Pacific Rise is characterized by pervasive bending-induced faulting of the oceanic plate and a relatively uniform morphology of the overriding continental margin. Seepage at this part of the margin typically occurs at approximately cone-shaped mounds 50 - 100 m high and up to 1 km wide at the base. Over 60 such mounds were identified on the 240 km long margin segment. Some normal faults also host localized seepage. In contrast, in the southeast, the 220 km long margin segment overriding the oceanic crust formed at the Cocos-Nazca Spreading Centre has a comparatively more irregular morphology caused mainly by the subduction of ridges and seamounts sitting on the oceanic plate. Over 40 seeps were located on this part of the margin. This margin segment with irregular morphology exhibits diverse seep structures. Seeps are related to landslide scars, seamount-subduction related fractures, mounds, and faults. Several backscatter anomalies in side-scan images are without apparent relief and are probably related to carbonate precipitation. Detected fluid seeps are not evenly distributed across the margin but occur in a roughly margin parallel band centered 28 ± 7 km landward of the trench. This distribution suggests that seeps are possibly fed to fluids rising from the plate boundary along deep-penetrating faults through the upper plate.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-09-24
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 6
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 11 (5).
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Submarine slope failures occur at all continental margins, but the processes generating different mass wasting phenomena remain poorly understood. Multibeam bathymetry mapping of the Middle America Trench reveals numerous continental slope failures of different dimensions and origin. For example, large rotational slumps have been interpreted to be caused by slope collapse in the wake of subducting seamounts. In contrast, the mechanisms generating translational slides have not yet been described. Lithology, shear strength measurements, density, and pore water alkalinity from a sediment core across a slide plane indicate that a few centimeters thick intercalated volcanic tephra layer marks the detachment surface. The ash layer can be correlated to the San Antonio tephra, emplaced by the 6000 year old caldera-forming eruption from Masaya-Caldera, Nicaragua. The distal deposits of this eruption are widespread along the continental slope and ocean plate offshore Nicaragua. Grain size measurements permit us to estimate the reconstruction of the original ash layer thickness at the investigated slide. Direct shear test experiments on Middle American ashes show a high volume reduction during shearing. This indicates that marine tephra layers have the highest hydraulic conductivity of the different types of slope sediment, enabling significant volume reduction to take place under undrained conditions. This makes ash layers mechanically distinct within slope sediment sequences. Here we propose a mechanism by which ash layers may become weak planes that promote translational sliding. The mechanism implies that ground shaking by large earthquakes induces rearrangement of ash shards causing their compaction (volume reduction) and produces a rapid accumulation of water in the upper part of the layer that is capped by impermeable clay. The water-rich veneer abruptly reduces shear strength, creating a detachment plane for translational sliding. Tephra layers might act as slide detachment planes at convergent margins of subducting zones, at submarine slopes of volcanic islands, and at submerged volcano slopes in lakes.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Cold seep ecosystems can support enormous biomasses of free-living and symbiotic chemoautotrophic organisms that get their energy from the oxidation of methane or sulfide. Most of this biomass derives from animals that are associated with bacterial symbionts, which are able to metabolize the chemical resources provided by the seeping fluids. Often these systems also harbor dense accumulations of non-symbiotic megafauna, which can be relevant in exporting chemosynthetically fixed carbon from seeps to the surrounding deep sea. Here we investigated the carbon sources of lithodid crabs (Paralomis sp.) feeding on thiotrophic bacterial mats at an active mud volcano at the Costa Rica subduction zone. To evaluate the dietary carbon source of the crabs, we compared the microbial community in stomach contents with surface sediments covered by microbial mats. The stomach content analyses revealed a dominance of epsilonproteobacterial 16S rRNA gene sequences related to the free-living and epibiotic sulfur oxidiser Sulfurovum sp. We also found Sulfurovum sp. as well as members of the genera Arcobacter and Sulfurimonas in mat-covered surface sediments where Epsilonproteobacteria were highly abundant constituting 10% of total cells. Furthermore, we detected substantial amounts of bacterial fatty acids such as i-C15:0 and C17:1ω6c with stable carbon isotope compositions as low as −53‰ in the stomach and muscle tissue. These results indicate that the white microbial mats at Mound 12 are comprised of Epsilonproteobacteria and that microbial mat-derived carbon provides an important contribution to the crab's nutrition. In addition, our lipid analyses also suggest that the crabs feed on other 13C-depleted organic matter sources, possibly symbiotic megafauna as well as on photosynthetic carbon sources such as sedimentary detritus.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-04-10
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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