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IODP Expedition 342: Paleogene Newfoundland Sediment Drifts
Week 6 Report (8-14 July 2012)
PDF file is available for download.
Operations
Week
6 of Expedition 342, Paleogene Newfoundland Sediment Drifts, began with the
recovery of Cores U1407A-9H through 15H, from 82.8 to 121.9 m drilling depth
below seafloor (DSF). Core U1407A-11H was the first partial stroke and we advanced
by recovery for two cores. The XCB system was deployed for Cores U1407A-16X
through 35X to the final depth of 308.7 m DSF. The seafloor was cleared at 1005
h on 9 July 2012, ending Hole U1407A. Overall core recovery for Hole U1407A was
205.64 m for the 308.7 m interval cored (67% recovery). The unexpectedly low
recovery is due to several empty or nearly empty cores (Cores U1407A-12H
through 15H, Cores U1407A-32X though 35X). The total time spent on Hole U1407A
was 50 hours.
The
vessel was offset 20 m to the east and Hole U1407B was spudded at 1200 h on 9
July. Cores U1407B-1H through 11H were recovered to 95.0 m using non-magnetic
core barrels and the FLEXIT core orientation tool. A 3-m interval was drilled
without coring to optimize core overlap in multiple holes. Based on the recovery
of an interval of chert layers in Hole U1407A, the interval
from 95 to 127 m was drilled without coring using the XCB system. Cores
U1407B-13X through 28X were then recovered to the final depth of 276.3 m DSF.
The seafloor was cleared at 1340 h on 10 July, ending Hole U1407B. Hole U1407B recovered
234.54 m over the 241.3 m cored (97% recovery). The total time spent on Hole
U1407B was 27.75 hours.
The
vessel was offset 40 m to the west and Hole U1407C was spudded at 1510 h on 10
July. Cores U1407C-1H through 11H (0-93.0 m DSF) were recovered using
non-magnetic core barrels; no core orientation was performed in Hole U1407C. A
3-m interval was drilled without coring to optimize core overlap in multiple
holes. Once again, a 21-m interval (96-117 m) was drilled without coring through
the chert layers using the XCB. Cores U1407B-13X
through 29X were then recovered to the final depth of 261.6 m DSF. The seafloor
was cleared at 1805 h on 11 July. The drill string was pulled up to 2792 m drilling
depth below rig floor (DRF) and the rig was secured for a dynamic positioning (DP)
move to the next site at 1915 h on 11 July, ending Hole U1407C. Hole U1407C recovered
244.4 m from the 237.6 m interval cored (103%). The total time spent on Hole
U1407C was 29.5 hours.
The vessel arrived at Site U1408 after a 1.46 nm transit in DP mode from Site
U1407, which took 1.75 hours at 0.83 nmi/hr. The
vessel stabilized over Site U1408 at 2045 hours (UTC-2.5h) on 11 July. A 4.3-m
long mudline core was recovered and seafloor depth was calculated to be 3033.2
m DRF (3021.6 m water depth). Cores U1408A-1H through 20H (0-182.9 m DSF) were
recovered using non-magnetic core barrels and core orientation was performed
with the FLEXIT tool on the first 20 cores. Core U1408A-14H was the first
partial stroke and the APC system was advanced by recovery
for this and subsequent cores. The XCB system was deployed from Core
U1408A-21X through 27X to a final depth of 246.5 m DSF. The seafloor was
cleared at 1045 h on 13 July, ending Hole U1408A. Overall core recovery for
Hole U1408A was 243.92 m for the 246.5 m interval cored (99% recovery). The
total time spent on Hole U1408A was 38.00 hours.
The
vessel was offset 20 m to the east. Hole U1408B was spudded at 1230 h on 13
July. Based on the mudline core recovery, the
seafloor depth was calculated to be 3022.1 m. Cores U1408B-1H through 18H
(0-154.5 m DSF) used non-magnetic core barrels and the FLEXIT core orientation
tool was deployed only on the first four cores. It was removed when it was
speculated that the weight of the FLEXIT housing might be responsible for
shearing off the APC barrel at the overshot three times, slowing down coring
significantly. A 3-m interval was drilled without coring to optimize core recovery
in adjacent holes. The XCB system was deployed for Cores U1408B-19X through 26X
to a final depth of 217.5 m DSF. The seafloor was cleared at 1700 h on 14 July,
ending Hole U1408B. The recovery for Hole U1408B was 224.09 m over the 214.5 m
cored (104%). The total time spent on Hole U1408B was 30.25 hours.
The
vessel was offset 20 m to the south. Hole U1408C was spudded at 1905 h on 14
July. Cores U1408C-1H through 7H were retrieved using non-magnetic core
barrels. The FLEXIT orientation tool was installed on Core U1408C-6H to
re-capture an area of particular interest for paleomagnetics. At the end of
week 6, APC coring in Hole U1408C had advanced to 59.3 m DSF.
Science Results
Site U1407 (41° 25.5'N, 49° 48.8'W) is a mid-depth site (3073 m)
towards the shallow end of the Expedition 342 Paleogene Newfoundland Sediment
Drifts depth transect. The site is positioned to capture a record
of sedimentation about 1.9 km shallower than the largely sub-carbonate
compensation depth record drilled at IODP Site U1403. The location above the
average late Paleogene carbonate compensation depth should be sensitive to fluctuations
in carbonate burial, whether these reflect variations in dissolution related to
changes in the CCD, changes in carbonate production,
or variations in background non-carbonate sedimentation. Our primary scientific
objectives for drilling Site U1407 were as follows: (1) to reconstruct the CCD
in a primarily carbonate-dominated record for the Early and Middle Eocene, (2)
to obtain records of the Eocene and Paleocene in carbonate-rich sediments that
host abundant foraminifera suitable to the construction of geochemical climate
records, (3) to evaluate the history of deep water on sediment chemistry,
grain-size and provenance, and (4) to evaluate biological evolution during
Paleogene climate transitions. Secondary objectives included dating acoustic
horizons to better constrain regional sedimentation during the Paleogene and
Cretaceous and allow us to anticipate the likely age of the sedimentary
sequence at the remaining Expedition 342 sites.
The
sedimentary sequence recovered at Site U1407 consists of Pleistocene to uppermost
Lower Cretaceous pelagic sediments overlying reefal sediments of Late Albian
age. The sequence has been divided into six lithostratigraphic units. Unit I is
~8 m thick, and composed of Pleistocene
foraminiferal nannofossil ooze intermittently interbedded, at the decimeter
scale, with foraminiferal sand and clay with nannofossils. Rock fragments of
pebble- to cobble-size and coarse silt- to sand-sized quartz and amphibole are
pervasive. Unit II is a ~10 m thick sequence of Early Oligocene
age composed of clay with nannofossils with disseminated manganese nodules and
sulfide patches and intercalated millimeter to centimeter sulfide layers. Unit
III consists of ~70 m of Middle Eocene nannofossil ooze
with foraminifers; sulfide patches and layers are also present. An abrupt
downhole change in color from light greenish gray into white that is associated
with significant changes in physical proxies and a downhole increase in carbonate
content marks the contact between Units III and IV. Unit IV consists of ~20 m
of Lower Eocene nannofossil ooze with foraminifers.
Unit V consists of Paleocene to Cenomanian nannofossil chalk, which is divided
into two subunits (Subunits Va and Vb). The contact between lithostratigraphic
Units IV and Va was not recovered because of the operations decision to drill
without attempting to recover a sequence of what we interpret to be
well-developed cherts. Subunit Va is composed of ~60 m
of Paleocene nannofossil chalk with foraminifers and radiolarians. Subunit Vb
is mainly nannofossil chalk or nannofossil chalk with foraminifers, and spans
the Cenomanian to Campanian over ~85 m. Subunit Vb contains black shales of
the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary age (Oceanic Anoxic Event-2 [OAE-2],
~93 Ma). Unit VI is divided into two subunits (Units VIa and
VIb). Subunit VIa is ~1 m thick and comprised of fine-grained,
partially silicified and dolomitized calcareous grainstone with horizontal
laminations; it is of Late Albian age. Subunit VIb consists of extremely poorly
recovered fossiliferous reef deposits of Albian age.
Biostratigraphy
at Site U1407 is based on nannofossils and planktic and benthic foraminifers
throughout the ~300-m thick Pleistocene to Albian succession of nannofossil
ooze with varying amounts of clay and foraminifers. Nannofossils, planktic
foraminifers and smaller benthic foraminifers are present in all but the basal
Albian neritic limestone, which contains larger benthic foraminifers and
macrofossils. Thin Pleistocene and lower Oligocene intervals overlie an
expanded middle Eocene through upper Albian succession. Sedimentation rates are
relatively high (~2 cm/ky) through the Eocene. A detailed biozonation of Upper
to mid-Cretaceous sediments reveals a condensed sequence that records the
Campanian/Santonian, Santonian/Coniacian, Coniacian/Turonian and
Albian/Cenomanian boundaries. Biostratigraphy of black shale recovered around
230 m core depth below seafloor (CSF-A) indicates the presence of Turonian
nannofossil Zone UC6 above, and Cenomanian nannofossil zone UC5/4 below,
providing strong evidence that this lithology represents OAE-2. Benthic foraminiferal assemblages
support this conclusion, with the black shale dominated by agglutinated species
and calcareous taxa indicating low oxygen concentrations at the seafloor. Radiolarians
are abundant and well preserved in the early middle Eocene and in the Paleocene
but are either absent or indeterminate in both the upper Pleistocene-late
middle Eocene and lowermost Paleocene-Cretaceous intervals.
Paleomagnetic
work included routine demagnetization measurements on archive section halves
from Holes U1407A, 1407B, 1407C and 1408A. For Holes U1407A and U1408A,
step-wise demagnetization, bulk susceptibility and AMS measurements were
conducted on selected samples. For Site U1406, the identification of the Oligocene-Miocene
Transition (OMT) and the Eocene-Oligocene Transition (EOT) were finalized. The
shipboard magnetostratigraphic age model also indicates at least four hiatuses
in Hole U1406A, none of which are longer than ~3 my. These hiatuses complicate
the magnetostratigraphic correlation between the three holes at Site U1406.
A
composite depth scale and splice were constructed for Site U1406. At Site
U1407, real-time correlation between the three holes was possible based on magnetic
susceptibility data. The Cenomanian/Turonian boundary and OAE-2 were
successfully recovered in all three holes at Site U1407; we found that each
lithostratigraphic expression of the OAE differed, often markedly, from the
pervious hole. At Site U1408, real-time correlation is possible based on clear
astronomical cycles that can be recognized in the magnetic susceptibility data.
Early indications suggest that a continuous splice will be possible for large
parts of the Site U1408 sedimentary column.
The
geochemistry team carried out routine shipboard analyses for headspace gas
samples, interstitial water profiles, and bulk sediment geochemistry for Site
U1407. Methane concentrations (1.4 to 4.12 ppmv) were not above atmospheric levels.
Chloride anomalies and low pore water concentrations of the redox sensitive
metals iron and manganese suggest the impact of the organic matter-rich black
shale sequences (OAE-2) on diagenetic processes. We determined CaCO3,
TOC, and TN content on discrete samples at one per section resolution; higher
density sampling commenced in Hole U1407B from sections coeval with high
amplitude features captured in Hole U1407A. Carbonate content ranges from 0 to
93%. TOC values are typically 0.1–0.5%. Around ~80 m CSF-A, a sharp
downhole increase in carbonate content is documented (59 to 83 wt%
CaCO3) and correlates with shifts in several
proxies (e.g., color reflectance, magnetic susceptibility, NGR, TOC and TN
values). Homogenous to micro-laminated, organic-rich black shales from Holes
U1407A and U1407C are rich in TOC (~4 and 17 wt%). Organic matter is thermally
immature and relatively well preserved, as shown by both the high hydrogen
indices (~600-620 mg hydrocarbons per g organic carbon) and low Tmax
values (<415°C). C/N ratios increase as organic carbon concentrations
increase. Organic matter is Type II kerogen, derived from algal and microbial
primary production.
A
full physical properties program was run on cores from all three holes at Site
U1407 and for Hole U1408A. The report for Site U1406 was finalized and results
show three major trends for almost all the physical properties. (1) All physical
properties show a pronounced change associated with the contact between
lithostratigraphic Units I and II. (2) Throughout lithostratigraphic Unit II, there is a
global increase in physical properties values downhole. (3) In
lithostratigraphic Units III and IV, data show greater variability with prominent
peaks that, in some cases, correlate with changes in calcium carbonate content.
Education and Outreach
Week six was the busiest of the cruise so
far. We completed ten videoconferences to schools, museums, and camps around
the world. The highlight was speaking with the New Zealand National Aquarium
– an event facilitated by Chris Hollis and his team at GNS. Expedition
videos "Episode 3: Time Machine" has reached nearly 800 views on YouTube and "Episode
4" is in the final stage of production. Four blogs were posted on the JR.org
blog. The most popular was the post about Oceanic Anoxic Events (OAEs; ~700
views). Expedition 342 was featured on the blog Deep Sea News in "Drilling for
Dinosaur Death: The JOIDES Resolution Finds Extinction in Deep Sea Mud". The
article discusses cruise highlights such as the K-Pg, the PETM, and OAE 2,
exposing the public to the importance of the JR; this article brought new
visitors to our Facebook page and we have gained many new followers. Expedition
posts continue on Facebook, Twitter, and tumblr. Maggie Koerth-Baker
interviewed Dick Norris, Chris Junium, Jessica Whiteside, and Caitlin Scully
for BoingBoing. Expedition 342 and the JR will be a feature story on their site
– one of the most popular in the country. Brian Switek of Wired
interviewed Jessica Whiteside for his paleontology themed blog Laelaps.
Technical Support and HSE Activities
The shipboard labs were busy processing cores. End of expedition shipment requirements
were updated. A fire and boat drill was held on 11 July. Eye wash stations were
tested Monday 9 July.
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