Moore, G. F., Taira, A., Klaus, A., Becker, L., Boeckel, B., Cragg, B. A., Dean, A., Fergusson, C. L., Henry, P., Hirano, S., Hisamitsu, T. et al. (2001). New insights into deformation and fluid flow processes in the Nankai Trough accretionary prism: Results of Ocean Drilling Program Leg 190. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 2, Article No: 2001GC000166.The Nankai Trough accretionary prism is considered an ?end-member? prism accreting a coarse terrigenous sediment section in a setting with structural simplicity, unparalleled resolution by seismic and other geophysical techniques, and large historic earthquakes. It therefore has been the focus of Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) drilling to address several unresolved questions concerning accretionary processes and prism evolution. At six sites cored along two transects across the Nankai Trough accretionary prism during ODP Leg 190, lithostratigraphy and sediment diagenesis vary markedly. For the first time, reference sites at the seaward ends of the two transects defined the stratigraphic framework of the accreting/subducting Shikoku Basin sedimentary section. A thick section of Miocene turbidites and smectite-rich mudstone is present within the subducting section at the Ashizuri site. The turbidites and mudstones are absent in the correlative section at the Muroto site; variations in lithology, mineralogy, and hydrologic properties of the incoming sediments probably contribute to the difference in prism wedge taper between the two transects, while possibly controlling the seismic character of the active plate boundary. The d?collement in both transects is localized within a common stratigraphic unit (?5.9?7 Ma) within the lower Shikoku Basin facies. The d?collement is also a major boundary for both physical and mechanical properties. A broad low-chloride pore water anomaly in the lower Shikoku Basin unit, first identified at Site 808, progressively decreases in magnitude from prism to basin along the Muroto Transect. Physical properties relationships, evidence for mineralogic changes in the sediments, and pore fluid chemistry suggest that the chloride anomaly results primarily from in situ diagenetic reactions in the sediments, possibly augmented by flow of freshened fluid from depth. New constraints on stratigraphy and age of units along more landward parts of the Muroto Transect have dramatically changed our ideas about the tectonic evolution of the prism in this area. Growth of the seaward-most part of the prism took place very rapidly, with 40 km of accretion within the past 2 Myr. This rate is at least 3 times greater than growth rates in a comparable prism.Peer reviewe
Subduction complexes provide an opportunity to examine the interactions of deformation and fluid flow in an active setting. Ocean Drilling Program Leg 190 investigated the relationship between deformation, physical properties, and fluid flow in the toe of the Nankai Trough accretionary complex. With three sites (two from Leg 190, one from a previous leg) penetrating the décollement zone at various stages of development along the same transect, it is now possible to examine the change in porosity during rapid loading by trench turbidites and subsequent underthrusting. Results indicate inhibited dewatering and probable overpressure development seaward of the frontal thrust. Comparison of a reference site porosity versus depth curve to data from a site located within the protothrust zone indicates an overpressure ratio, *, of ϳ0.42, where * ؍ [(pore pressure ؊ hydrostatic pressure)/(lithostatic pressure ؊ hydrostatic pressure)]. These overpressures suggest that the hemipelagic sediments have insufficient permeability for fluid escape to keep pace with the rapid loading by turbidite deposition within the trench. At a site 1.75 km farther arcward, an excess pore pressure ratio of * ؍ ϳ0.47 was estimated, reflecting the additional loading due to recent thickening by the frontal thrust.
[1] An approach based on March's theory is applied to measurements of the anisotropy of electrical conductivity on samples and is used to quantify initial strain at the toe of the Nankai accretionary wedge. A quantitative determination of strain is possible from simple assumptions: passive reorientation of flat pores forming the porous network and existence of a linear relationship between fabric tensor and electrical conductivity tensor. We show that this simple model correctly accounts for the increase of anisotropy with compaction at a reference site located in the trench (Ocean Drilling Program drill Site 1173). At the toe of the accretionary wedge (Site 1174), development of anisotropy in the horizontal plane and concurrent reduction of vertical plane anisotropy are observed. This can be explained by 12% horizontal ductile shortening, occurring after decollement initiation but before slip on imbricate thrust faults. Anisotropy in the underthrust sequence is correctly described by vertical compaction, consistent with decoupled stress states across the decollement. At Site 1174 the magnitude of ductile strain implies at least 75 m slip on the decollement. Ductile shortening is associated with porosity loss, implying partly drained conditions above the decollement.
Abstract-Bosumtwi is a very well-preserved 1.07 Myr old, complex terrestrial impact crater located in south-central Ghana, West Africa. The impact structure has a diameter of about 10.5 km and was formed in 2.1-2.2 Gyr Precambrian metasedimentary and metavolcanic rocks. Drilling and logging was carried out during the Lake Bosumtwi Drilling Project (BCDP) which was supported by the International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP). One of the aims of this project is to achieve detailed information on the subsurface structure and crater fill of one of the best preserved large young impact structures.We interpreted the wireline logs and televiewer images. The physical properties including shallow resistivity, p-wave velocity, magnetic susceptibility, and borehole diameter of the breccia differ significantly from those of the meta-graywackes and slate/phyllites. Fractures observed in the televiewer images are interpreted to determine their characteristic structural features. The fracture dip angles are steep (50-70°) and the two main dip directions are southeast and southwest. Most fractures observed in the borehole are open. The indicated main stress direction is north-south.
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