11 research outputs found

    Sedimentary and structural evolution of the Eastern South Korea Plateau (ESKP), East Sea (Japan Sea)

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    The East Sea (Japan Sea) is a semi-enclosed back-arc basin that is thought to preserve a significant record of tectonic evolution and paleo-climatic changes of Eastern Asia during the Neogene. We use here 2-D regional multi-channel seismic reflection profiles and borehole data from Expedition 346 of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) to provide new constraints on the geological history of the Eastern South Korea Plateau (ESKP). The ESKP represents a structurally-complex basement high in the southwestern East Sea which formed during rifting of the back-arc basin. Our new observations show that the ESKP is composed of numerous horsts and grabens controlled by NE-trending normal faults. The acoustic basement is blanketed by Oligocene to recent sediments that have preferentially accumulated in topographic lows (up to 1.5 km thick) and have been cored during Expedition 346 at Site U1430 close to the southern margin of the ESKP. Seismic profiles in the ESKP reveal three units separated by regional unconformities. These seismic units closely correspond to IODP lithostratigraphic units defined at Site U1430, where biostratigraphic data can be used to constrain the timing of three main evolutionary stages of the ESKP. Stage 1 was related to rifting in the late Oligocene and middle Miocene, terminated by a regional uplift leading to an erosional phase in the middle Miocene. Stage 2 was associated with subsidence in the middle and late Miocene and uplift and accompanying erosion or non-deposition in the latest late Miocene. Stage 3 (Pliocene to present) recorded overall uniform hemipelagic-pelagic subsidence of the ESKP with short-lived tectonically-induced uplifts in the late middle Miocene and latest Miocene-early Pliocene. The three stages of evolution of the ESKP closely correlate to sedimentary changes since the Oligocene and suggest a direct control of regional/local tectonics on sedimentation patterns in the southwestern East Sea, with secondary influence of regional climatic and paleo-oceanographic processes

    Physical and Acoustic Properties of Gas-bearing Sediments in Jinhae Bay, the South Sea of Korea

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    High-resolution seismic survey and sediment core sampling were conducted to investigate acoustic characteristics of gas-bearing sediments in Jinhae Bay, the southeast of Korea. The sediment in Jinhae Bay is mostly homogenous mud deposited after the Holocene transgression. Along with the 410 km of chirp seismic profiling, five piston core samples were collected on the track lines

    Late Neogene-Quaternary submarine mass wasting along the margins of the Ulleung Basin, East Sea: Geomorphologic controls and geohazard potential

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    Special issue Paleoenvironmental studies in the Korean Peninsula and adjacent geographic areas IV.-- 30 pages, 17 figures, 2 tablesSeismic reflection data from the Ulleung Basin, East Sea, provide extensive evidence for Plio-Quaternary mass transport deposits (MTDs). We identified 23 MTDs embedded in 7 MTD bearing seismic units (U1–U7, from oldest to youngest) and estimated their geometric characteristics and source areas. The thicknesses and volumes of these MTDs range between 25 m and 392 m, and 13 km3–550 km3, respectively. The depth of the acoustic basement below sea level varies between about 100 m in the western margins to over 5900 m in the central part of the basin and highlights eight structural highs in the central and southern parts of the basin. These structural highs had a major role in controlling the pathway and distribution of the MTDs in the basin. In general, the thickest MTD units are sourced from the southern parts of the basin and the volume of these MTDs has remained relatively constant throughout the Plio-Quaternary. The seismic reflection data also reveal about 50 m high slide/slump scars formed on the seafloor by the latest submarine landslides which mainly concentrate on the southern and western margins of the basin. High-sedimentation rates and pore pressure build-up are likely the predominant factor controlling initiation of slope failures in the southern margin. Tectonics and gas hydrates likely play a role, too. The initial water depth of submarine landslides and volume and runout of the MTDs originating from the southern margin imply significant geohazard to the regionThis study was supported by the Korea Ministry of Knowledge Economy (MKE) and by the project “International Ocean Discovery Program” funded by the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries, KoreaPeer Reviewe

    Mapping gas hydrate and fluid flow indicators and modeling gas hydrate stability zone (GHSZ) in the Ulleung Basin, East (Japan) Sea: Potential linkage between the occurrence of mass failures and gas hydrate dissociation

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    21 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables, 1 appendix supplementary data https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2016.12.001The Ulleung Basin, East (Japan) Sea, is well-known for the occurrence of submarine slope failures along its entire margins and associated mass-transport deposits (MTDs). Previous studies postulated that gas hydrates which broadly exist in the basin could be related with the failure process. In this study, we identified various features of slope failures on the margins, such as landslide scars, slide/slump bodies, glide planes and MTDs, from a regional multi-channel seismic dataset. Seismic indicators of gas hydrates and associated gas/fluid flow, such as the bottom-simulating reflector (BSR), seismic chimneys, pockmarks, and reflection anomalies, were re-compiled. The gas hydrate occurrence zone (GHOZ) within the slope sediments was defined from the BSR distribution. The BSR is more pronounced along the southwestern slope. Its minimal depth is about 100 m below seafloor (mbsf) at about 300 m below sea-level (mbsl). Gas/fluid flow and seepage structures were present on the seismic data as columnar acoustic-blanking zones varying in width and height from tens to hundreds of meters. They were classified into: (a) buried seismic chimneys (BSC), (b) chimneys with a mound (SCM), and (c) chimneys with a depression/pockmark (SCD) on the seafloor. Reflection anomalies, i.e., enhanced reflections below the BSR and hyperbolic reflections which could indicate the presence of gas, together with pockmarks which are not associated with seismic chimneys, and SCDs are predominant in the western-southwestern margin, while the BSR, BSCs and SCMs are widely distributed in the southern and southwestern margins. Calculation of the present-day gas-hydrate stability zone (GHSZ) shows that the base of the GHSZ (BGHSZ) pinches out at water depths ranging between 180 and 260 mbsl. The occurrence of the uppermost landslide scars which is below about 190 mbsl is close to the range of the GHSZ pinch-out. The depths of the BSR are typically greater than the depths of the BGHSZ on the basin margins which may imply that the GHOZ is not stable. Close correlation between the spatial distribution of landslides, seismic features of free gas, gas/fluid flow and expulsion and the GHSZ may suggest that excess pore-pressure caused by gas hydrate dissociation could have had a role in slope failures.This study was carried out as a part of the projects entitled “Marine Geological and Geophysical Mapping of the Korean Seas” (grant number: 16-3317) supported by the Ministry of Knowledge Economy (MKE; currently Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy: MOTIE) and “International Ocean Discovery Program” (16-9852) supported by the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries Korea. S.H. Lee is supported by the “Basic Science Program” (PE99435) of the Korea Institute of Ocean Science and Technology (KIOST)Peer Reviewe

    Impact of Gas Hydrate and Related Fluid Seepage on Submarine Slope Failures along the Margins of the Ulleung Basin, East Sea (Japan Sea)

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    American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, 12-16 December 2016, San FranciscoThe Ulleung Basin is a back-arc basin that is known to retain gas hydrate reservoirs in the East (Japan) Sea. The basin contains large volumes of mass-transport deposits (MTDs) due to submarine slope failures along its margins since the Neogene. In this study, seismic indicators of gas hydrate and associated gas and fluid flow were re-compiled on a regional multi-channel seismic reflection data. The gas hydrate occurrence zone (GHOZ) is defined by the BSR (bottom-simulating reflector) distribution. It is more pronounced along the southwestern slope with a minimum depth of 100 mbsf (meters below seafloor) at 295 mbsl (meter below sea level) on the southern, while its thickness is the greatest (250 mbsf) at the southwestern margin. Flow and seepage structures reflected on the seismic data as columnar acoustic-blanking zones varying in width and height (up to hundreds of meters) were classified into: (a) buried seismic chimneys (BSC), (b) chimneys with a mound (SCM), and (c) chimneys with a depression (SCD) on the seafloor. Pockmarks which are not associated with seismic chimneys, reflection anomalies (i.e., enhanced reflections below the BSR and hyperbolic reflections), and SCD are predominant features in the western margin, while the BSR, BSC and SCM are densely distributed in the south-southwestern margin. Present-day gas hydrate stability zone (GHSZ) is calculated using in-situ bottom-water temperature and geothermal gradient measurements (ranging between 0–17.5 oC and 25–200 oC/km, respectively) and multibeam bathymetry data. The GHSZ thickness exceeds 190 m, and the upslope limit of GHSZ ranges between about 180 and 260 mbsl. This depth range is in the proximity of the uppermost depths of landslide scars (~190 mbsl) which are common features on the slopes along with glide planes, slides/slumps and MTDs. Overall, the base of GHSZ (BGHSZ) and the BSR depths are well-correlated in the basin. However, the BSR depths are typically greater (up to 50 m) than the BGHSZ depths on the slopes suggesting that the GHOZ is not stable. A close correlation exists between the spatial distributions of the landslides, and indicators of gas hydrate and gas/fluid flow and the GHSZ. This may imply that excess pore-pressure caused by dissociation/dissolution of gas hydrates could have played a role on slope failuresPeer Reviewe
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