113 research outputs found
Oxygen binding and activation by the complexes of PY2- and TPA-appended diphenylglycoluril receptors with copper and other metals
Deep structure of the Ionian Sea and Sicily Dionysus - Cruise No. M111, October 10 - November 1, 2014, Catania (Italy) – Catania (Italy)
Summary
The origin of the Ionian Sea lithosphere and the deep structure of its margins remain a little
investigated part of the Mediterranean Sea. To shed light on the plate tectonic setting in this
central part of southern Europe, R/V METEOR cruise M111 set out to acquire deep penetrating
seismic data in the Ionian Sea. M111 formed the core of an amphibious investigation covering
the Ionian Sea and island of Sicily. A total of 153 OBS/OBH deployments using French and
German instruments were successfully carried out, in addition to 12 land stations installed on
Sicily, which recorded the offshore air gun shots.
The aim of this onshore-offshore study is to quantify the deep geometry and architecture of the
Calabria subduction zone and Ionian Sea lithosphere and to shed light on the nature of the Ionian
Sea crust (oceanic crust vs. thinned continental crust). Investigating the structure of the Ionian
crust and lithospheric mantle will contribute to unravel the unknown ocean-continent transition
and Tethys margin. Analyzing the tectonic activity and active deformation zones is essential for
understanding the subduction processes that underlie the neotectonics of the Calabrian
subduction zone and earthquake hazard of the Calabria/Sicily region, especially in the vicinity of
local decoupling zones
Carbon release from submarine seeps at the Costa Rica fore arc: implications for the volatile cycle at the Central America convergent margin
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
Emission of volatile halogenated compounds, speciation and localization of bromine and iodine in the brown algal genome model Ectocarpus siliculosus
This study explores key features of bromine and iodine metabolism in the filamentous brown alga and genomics model Ectocarpus siliculosus. Both elements are accumulated in Ectocarpus, albeit at much lower concentration factors (2-3 orders of magnitude for iodine, and < 1 order of magnitude for bromine) than e.g. in the kelp Laminaria digitata. Iodide competitively reduces the accumulation of bromide. Both iodide and bromide are accumulated in the cell wall (apoplast) of Ectocarpus, with minor amounts of bromine also detectable in the cytosol. Ectocarpus emits a range of volatile halogenated compounds, the most prominent of which by far is methyl iodide. Interestingly, biosynthesis of this compound cannot be accounted for by vanadium haloperoxidase since the latter have not been found to catalyze direct halogenation of an unactivated methyl group or hydrocarbon so a methyl halide transferase-type production mechanism is proposed
Giant depressions on the Chatham Rise offshore New Zealand – Morphology, structure and possible relation to fluid expulsion and bottom currents
Highlights
• Large seafloor depressions with diameters of up 10 km across have been mapped on the southern Chatham Rise, New Zealand.
• Seismic reflection data show scarce indications for vertical fluid flow but no clear link between fluid flow and depressions.
• Methane gas or methane hydrates appear to be absent on the southern Chatham Rise.
• Seismic evidence suggests that vertical fluid flow was likely fuelled by polygonal faulting and silica diagenesis
• The depressions are the results of erosion and sediment drift deposition of bottom currents associated with the Subtropical Front.
Abstract
Several giant seafloor depressions were investigated on the Chatham Rise offshore New Zealand using mainly bathymetric and seismic data, supplemented by sediment cores and reported porewater geochemistry data. The depressions have diameters of up to 11 km and occur on the southern flank of the Chatham Rise in water depths between 600 and 900 m, i.e. roughly underneath the location of the strongest thermal gradients of the Subtropical Front (STF) and characterized by eastward flowing currents. With up to 150 m of relief the depressions cut into post-Miocene deposits. Some of the depressions are partially filled with drift deposits that have similar seismic characteristics as the surrounding sediments and consist of alternations of silty muds and silts. Seismic profiles also show completely filled depressions that no longer have a bathymetric expression. Despite several pipe structures indicating vertical fluid flow, neither active fluid seepage nor indications for past fluid seepage are present at the seafloor of the Chatham Rise. Also, both pore water geochemistry and geophysical data do not show indications for an existing or past gas hydrate system in the area. Instead, seismic data suggest widespread polygonal faulting and the presence of silica diagenetic fronts. The release of mineral-bound water during silica diagenesis or fluid expulsion during sediment compaction can explain the presence of vertical fluid flow features but not the giant depressions themselves. Instead, the depressions are interpreted as the result of scouring by strong bottom currents for which fluid venting may have created the nucleation points
Crustal structure of the Niuafo’ou Microplate and Fonualei Rift and Spreading Center in the northeastern Lau Basin, Southwestern Pacific
Key points:
First insights into the crustal structure of the northeastern Lau Basin, along a 290 km transect at 17°20’S.
Crust in southern Fonualei Rift and Spreading Center was created by extension of arc crust and variable amount of magmatism.
Magmatic underplating is present in some parts of the southern Niuafo’ou Microplate
The northeastern Lau Basin is one of the fastest opening and magmatically most active back‐arc regions on Earth. Although the current pattern of plate boundaries and motions in this complex mosaic of microplates is reasonably understood, the internal structure and evolution of the back‐arc crust are not. We present new geophysical data from a 290 km long east‐west oriented transect crossing the Niuafo’ou Microplate (back‐arc), the Fonualei Rift and Spreading Centre (FRSC) and the Tofua Volcanic Arc at 17°20’S. Our P‐wave tomography model and density modelling suggests that past crustal accretion inside the southern FRSC was accommodated by a combination of arc crustal extension and magmatic activity. The absence of magnetic reversals inside the FRSC supports this and suggests that focused seafloor spreading has until now not contributed to crustal accretion. The back‐arc crust constituting the southern Niuafo’ou Microplate reveals a heterogeneous structure comprising several crustal blocks. Some regions of the back‐arc show a crustal structure similar to typical oceanic crust, suggesting they originate from seafloor spreading. Other crustal blocks resemble a structure that is similar to volcanic arc crust or a ‘hydrous’ type of oceanic crust that has been created at a spreading center influenced by slab‐derived water at distances < 50 km to the arc. Throughout the back‐arc region we observe a high‐velocity (Vp 7.2‐7.5 km s‐1) lower crust, which is an indication for magmatic underplating, which is likely sustained by elevated upper mantle temperatures in this region
Crustal structure and evolution of the Niuafo'ou Microplate in the northeastern Lau Basin, Southwestern Pacific
Report and preliminary results of R/V Poseidon cruise P317/4 Istanbul-Istanbul 16 October - 4 November 2004 [POS417/4]
Ionian Abyssal Plain: a window into the Tethys oceanic lithosphere
The nature of the Ionian Sea crust has been the subject
of scientific debate for more than 30 years, mainly because seismic imaging
of the deep crust and upper mantle of the Ionian Abyssal Plain (IAP) has not
been conclusive to date. The IAP is sandwiched between the Calabrian and
Hellenic subduction zones in the central Mediterranean. A NNE–SSW-oriented
131 km long seismic refraction and wide-angle reflection profile, consisting
of eight ocean bottom seismometers and hydrophones, was acquired in 2014.
The profile was designed to univocally confirm the proposed oceanic nature
of the IAP crust as a remnant of the Tethys and to confute its
interpretation as a strongly thinned part of the African continental crust.
A P-wave velocity model developed from travel-time forward modelling is
refined by gravimetric data and synthetic modelling of the seismic data. A
roughly 6–7 km thick crust with velocities ranging from 5.1 to 7.2 km s−1, top to bottom, can be traced throughout the IAP. In the vicinity of
the Medina seamounts at the southern IAP boundary, the crust thickens to
about 9 km and seismic velocities decrease to 6.8 km s−1 at the crust–mantle
boundary. The seismic velocity distribution and depth of the crust–mantle
boundary in the IAP document its oceanic nature and support the
interpretation of the IAP as a remnant of the Tethys lithosphere with the
Malta Escarpment as a transform margin and a Tethys opening in the NNW–SSE
direction.</p
Mehrskalige Kartierung des konvergenten Kontinentalrandes vor Costa Rica - erste Ergebnisse der Fahrt SO163 mit FS SONNE
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