35 research outputs found
Morphological Transformations of Galaxies in the A901/02 Supercluster from STAGES
We present a study of galaxies in the Abell 901/902 Supercluster at z~0.165,
based on HST ACS F606W, COMBO-17, Spitzer 24um, XMM-Newton X-ray, and
gravitational lensing maps, as part of the STAGES survey. We characterize
galaxies with strong externally-triggered morphological distortions and normal
relatively undisturbed galaxies, using visual classification and quantitative
CAS parameters. We compare normal and distorted galaxies in terms of their
frequency, distribution within the cluster, star formation properties, and
relationship to dark matter (DM) or surface mass density, and intra-cluster
medium (ICM) density. We revisit the morphology density relation, which
postulates a higher fraction of early type galaxies in dense environments, by
considering separately galaxies with a low bulge-to-disk (B/D) ratio and a low
gas content as these two parameters may not be correlated in clusters. We
report here on our preliminary analysis.Comment: To appear in the ASP conference proceedings of the "Frank N. Bash
Symposium 2007: New Horizons in Astronomy", Eds. A. Frebel, J. Maund, J.
Shen, M. Siegel. 4 pages, 4 figure
Active mud volcanoes on the continental slope of the Canadian Beaufort Sea
The major geochemical characteristics of Red Sea brine are summarized for 11 brine-filled deeps located along the central graben axis between 19°N and 27°N. The major element composition of the different brine pools is mainly controlled by variable mixing situations of halite-saturated solution (evaporite dissolution) with Red Sea deep water. The brine chemistry is also influenced by hydrothermal water/rock interaction, whereas magmatic and sedimentary rock reactions can be distinguished by boron, lithium, and magnesium/calcium chemistry. Moreover, hydrocarbon chemistry (concentrations and δ 13 C data) of brine indicates variable injection of light hydrocarbons from organic source rocks and strong secondary (bacterial or thermogenic) degradation processes. A simple statistical cluster analysis approach was selected to look for similarities in brine chemistry and to classify the various brine pools, as the measured chemical brine compositions show remarkably strong concentration variations for some elements. The cluster analysis indicates two main classes of brine. Type I brine chemistry (Oceanographer and Kebrit Deeps) is controlled by evaporite dissolution and contributions from sediment alteration. The Type II brine (Suakin, Port Sudan, Erba, Albatross, Discovery, Atlantis II, Nereus, Shaban, and Conrad Deeps) is influenced by variable contributions from volcanic/ magmatic rock alteration. The chemical brine classification can be correlated with the sedimentary and tectonic setting of the related depressions. Type I brine-filled deeps are located slightly off-axis from the central Red Sea graben. A typical " collapse structure formation " which has been defined for the Kebrit Deep by evaluating seismic and geomorphological data probably corresponds to our Type I brine. Type II brine located in depressions in the northern Red Sea (i.e., Conrad and Shaban Deeps) could be correlated to " volcanic intrusion-/extrusion-related " deep formation. The chemical indications for hydrothermal influence on Conrad and Shaban Deep brine can be related to brines from the multi-deeps region in the central Red Sea, where volcanic/magmatic fluid/rock interaction is most obvious. The strongest hydrothermal influence is observed in Atlantis II brine (central multi-deeps region), which is also the hottest Red Sea brine body in 2011 (*68.2 °C)
More than a century of bathymetric observations and present-day shallow sediment characterization in Belfast Bay, Maine, USA: implications for pockmark field longevity
This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. The definitive version was published in Geo-Marine Letters 31 (2011): 237-248, doi:10.1007/s00367-011-0228-0.Mechanisms and timescales responsible for
pockmark formation and maintenance remain uncertain,
especially in areas lacking extensive thermogenic fluid
deposits (e.g., previously glaciated estuaries). This study
characterizes seafloor activity in the Belfast Bay, Maine
nearshore pockmark field using (1) three swath bathymetry
datasets collected between 1999 and 2008, complemented
by analyses of shallow box-core samples for radionuclide
activity and undrained shear strength, and (2) historical
bathymetric data (report and smooth sheets from 1872,
1947, 1948). In addition, because repeat swath bathymetry
surveys are an emerging data source, we present a selected
literature review of recent studies using such datasets for
seafloor change analysis. This study is the first to apply the
method to a pockmark field, and characterizes macro-scale
(>5 m) evolution of tens of square kilometers of highly
irregular seafloor. Presence/absence analysis yielded no
change in pockmark frequency or distribution over a 9-year
period (1999â2008). In that time pockmarks did not
detectably enlarge, truncate, elongate, or combine. Historical
data indicate that pockmark chains already existed in
the 19th century. Despite the lack of macroscopic changes
in the field, near-bed undrained shear-strength values of
less than 7 kPa and scattered downcore 137Cs signatures
indicate a highly disturbed setting. Integrating these
findings with independent geophysical and geochemical
observations made in the pockmark field, it can be
concluded that (1) large-scale sediment resuspension and
dispersion related to pockmark formation and failure do not
occur frequently within this field, and (2) pockmarks can
persevere in a dynamic estuarine setting that exhibits
minimal modern fluid venting. Although pockmarks are
conventionally thought to be long-lived features maintained
by a combination of fluid venting and minimal sediment
accumulation, this suggests that other mechanisms may be
equally active in maintaining such irregular seafloor
morphology. One such mechanism could be upwelling
within pockmarks induced by near-bed currents.Graduate support for Brothers came from a
Maine Economic Improvement Fund Dissertation Fellowship
Freshwater Seepage Into Sediments of the Shelf, Shelf Edge, and Continental Slope of the Canadian Beaufort Sea
Longâterm warming of the continental shelf of the Canadian Beaufort Sea caused by the transgression associated with the last deglaciation may be causing decomposition of relict offshore subsea permafrost and gas hydrates. To evaluate this possibility, pore waters from 118 sediment cores up to 7.3âm long were taken on the shelf and slope and analyzed for chloride concentrations and δ180 and δD composition. We observed downcore decreases in pore waters Clâ concentration in sediments from all sites from the inner shelf (<20âm water depth), from the shelf edge, from the outer slope (down to 1,000âm water depths), and from localized shelf features such as midshelf pingoâlike features and inner shelf pockmarks. In contrast, pore water freshening is absent from all investigated cores of the Mackenzie Trough. Downcore pore waters Clâ concentration decreases indicate regional widespread freshwater seepage. Extrapolations to zero Clâ of pore water Clâ versus δ180 regression lines indicate that freshwaters in these environments carry different isotope signatures and thus are sourced from different reservoirs. These isotopic signatures indicate that freshening of shelf sediments pore waters is a result of downward infiltration of Mackenzie River water, freshening of shelf edge sediments is due to relict submarine permafrost degradation or gas hydrate decomposition under the shelf, and freshening of slope sediments is consistent with regional groundwater flow and submarine groundwater discharge as far as 150 km from shore. These results confirm ongoing decomposition of offshore permafrost and suggest extensive current groundwater discharge far from the coast
Geological, geochemical, and microbiological heterogeneity of the seafloor around methane vents in the Eel River Basin, offshore California
Marine methane vents and cold seeps are common features along continental margins worldwide, serving as localized sites for methane release and colonization by microbial and chemosynthetic megafaunal communities. The Eel River Basin (ERB), located on the continental slope off Northern California, contains active methane vents and seep-associated chemosynthetic biological communities (CBC) on the crests of anticlines in âź520-m water depth. Seep-related features on the seafloor have a patchy distribution and include active bubbling vents, chemosynthetic clam beds, and sulfide-oxidizing bacterial mats. Methane sources supplying local seeps are heterogeneous on all spatial scales and support a large and diverse microbial assemblage involved in the anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM).
To develop a comprehensive understanding of the complex biological, geochemical and physical processes associated with, and influencing seafloor methane seepage, a multidisciplinary approach is required. Here we present an integrative, multidisciplinary study that illustrates the diverse processes associated with seafloor methane seepage within the Eel River Basin and the complex interactions defining the geochemistry, mineralogy and microbiology within this environment
Pockmarks off Big Sur, California
A pockmark field was discovered during EM-300 multi-beam bathymetric surveys on the lower continental slope off the Big Sur coast of California. The field contains âź1500 pockmarks which are between 130 and 260 m in diameter, and typically are 8â12 m deep located within a 560 km2 area. To investigate the origin of these features, piston cores were collected from both the interior and the flanks of the pockmarks, and remotely operated vehicle observation (ROV) video and sampling transects were conducted which passed through 19 of the pockmarks. The water column within and above the pockmarks was sampled for methane concentration. Piston cores and ROV collected push cores show that the pockmark field is composed of monotonous fine silts and clays and the cores within the pockmarks are indistinguishable from those outside the pockmarks. No evidence for either sediment winnowing or diagenetic alteration suggestive of fluid venting was obtained. 14C measurements of the organic carbon in the sediments indicate continuous sedimentation throughout the time resolution of the radiocarbon technique (âź45â000 yr BP), with a sedimentation rate of âź10 cm per 1000 yr both within and between the pockmarks. Concentrations of methane, dissolved inorganic carbon, sulfate, chloride, and ammonium in pore water extracted from within the cores are generally similar in composition to seawater and show little change with depth, suggesting low biogeochemical activity. These pore water chemical gradients indicate that neither significant accumulations of gas are likely to exist in the shallow subsurface (âź100 m) nor is active fluid advection occurring within the sampled sediments. Taken together the data indicate that these pockmarks are more than 45â000 yr old, are presently inactive, and contain no indications of earlier fluid or gas venting events
Formation of carbonate concretions in surface sediments of two mud mounds offshore Costa Rica: A stable isotope study
The surface sediments of two mud mounds
(ââMound 11ââ and ââMound 12ââ) offshore southwest Costa
Rica contain abundant authigenic carbonate concretions
dominated by high-Mg calcite (14â20 mol-% MgCO3). Pore
fluid geochemical profiles (sulfate, sulfide, methane, alkalinity,
Ca and Mg) indicate recent carbonate precipitation
within the zone of anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) at
variable depths. The current location of the authigenic carbonate
concretions is, however, not related to the present
location of the AOM zone, suggesting mineral precipitation
under past geochemical conditions as well as changes in the
flow rates of upward migrating fluids. Stable oxygen and
carbon isotope analysis of authigenic carbonate concretions
yielded d18Ocarbonate values ranging between 34.0 and
37.7 % Vienna standard mean ocean water (VSMOW) and
d13Ccarbonate values from -52.2 to -14.2 % Vienna Pee
Dee belemnite (VPDB). Assuming that no temperature
changes occurred during mineral formation, the authigenic
carbonate concretions have been formed at in situ temperature
of 4â5 °C. The d18Ocarbonate values suggest mineral
formation from seawater-derived pore fluid (d18Oporefluid
= 0 % VSMOW) for Mound 12 carbonate concretions but
also the presence of an emanating diagenetic fluid
(d18Oporefluid &5 %) in Mound 11. A positive correlation
between d13Ccarbonate and d18Ocarbonate is observed, indicating
the admixing of two different sources of dissolved carbon
and oxygen in the sediments of the two mounds. The
carbon of these sources are (1) marine bicarbonate
(d13Cporefluid &0 %) and (2) bicarbonate which formed
during the AOM (d13Cporefluid &-70 %). Furthermore, the
d18Oporefluid composition, with values up to ?4.7 % Vienna
standard mean ocean water (VSMOW), is interpreted to be
affected by the presence of emanating, freshened and boronenriched
fluids. Earlier, it has been shown that the origin of
18O-enriched fluids are deep diagenetic processes as it was
indicated by the presence of methane with thermogenic
signature (d13CCH4 = -38 %). A combination of present
geochemical data with geophysical observations indicates
that Mounds 11 and 12 represent a single fluid system
interconnected by deep-seated fault(s)