Origins of sediments and fluids in submarine mud volcanoes off Tanegashima Island, northern Ryukyu Trench, Japan

Mud volcanoes are topographic features through which over-pressurized sediments are intruded upward and erupted, transporting fluids and sediments from the deep subsurface to the surface/seafloor. To understand material and biogeochemical cycling through mud volcanoes, we investigated the origins of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in earth science (Lausanne) 2023-07, Vol.11
Hauptverfasser: Ijiri, Akira, Setoguchi, Ryoma, Mitsutome, Yuki, Toki, Tomohiro, Murayama, Masafumi, Hagino, Kyoko, Hamada, Yohei, Yamagata, Takeyasu, Matsuzaki, Hiroyuki, Tanikawa, Wataru, Tadai, Osamu, Kitada, Kazuya, Hoshino, Tatsuhiko, Noguchi, Takuro, Ashi, Juichiro, Inagaki, Fumio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mud volcanoes are topographic features through which over-pressurized sediments are intruded upward and erupted, transporting fluids and sediments from the deep subsurface to the surface/seafloor. To understand material and biogeochemical cycling through mud volcanoes, we investigated the origins of sediments and fluids erupted by four submarine mud volcanoes off Tanegashima Island, along the northern Ryukyu Trench: MV#1–3 and MV#14. We estimated the ages of the source sequences of the mud volcano sediments to be middle to late Miocene based on nannofossils and 10 Be ages. The sediments were characteristically enriched in illite. The similar mineral compositions and vitrinite reflectance values (0.42%–0.45%) of sediments erupted by the mud volcanoes strongly suggest that each is rooted in the same source sequence. Pore waters had Cl − concentrations ∼40% that of seawater and were proportionally enriched in 18 O and depleted in D, indicating the addition of freshwater from the dehydration of clay minerals. However, the smectite and illite contents (
ISSN:2296-6463
2296-6463
DOI:10.3389/feart.2023.1206810