hr Universal Time Coordinated (UTC). After 10 days and 1.5 hr on site drilling three holes (Holes 829A, 829B, and 829C) we departed Site 829 at 1230 UTC on 5 November 1990. We were forced to abandon Hole 829A at 590.3 meters below seafloor (mbsf) because of hole collapse and filling problems. Hole 829B was aborted because a core barrel bent on the steeply sloping seafloor. Hole 829C was completed in a hard horizon (58.4 mbsf) where the advanced piston coring (APC) system could penetrate no farther. Site 829 (proposed Site DEZ-2) is located within the collision zone of the d'Entrecasteaux Zone (DEZ) along the forearc slope of the New Hebrides Island Arc where the North d'Entrecasteaux Ridge (NDR) impinges upon the arc slope, approximately 3 km south of Site 827 and about 35 km west of Espiritu Santo Island, Vanuatu. This site was located very close to the original proposed site (DEZ-2) along a single-channel seismic reflection line surveyed by the JOIDES Resolution prior to spudding in at Site 827. The site selected lies on a very narrow (~200-m-wide) shelf protruding out from a 10° slope. We were able to spud in without difficulty on our first try and cored to 590.3 mbsf, recovering 197.44 m of core for a recovery rate of 33.4%. Hole 829B was drilled and cored to 19.5 mbsf, recovering 15.59 m for an 80% recovery rate; Hole 829C was drilled and cored to 58.4 mbsf, recovering 52.67 m of core for a 90.2% recovery rate. The purpose of drilling a second hole at this site was to recover cores with the APC in the upper 100 m of section that was poorly recovered during drilling with the rotary core barrel in Hole 829A. Oriented cores for paleomagnetic analyses and structural examinations were taken and whole-round core samples for both fluid analyses and physical properties measurements were obtained. This was our second attempt to drill to the décollement in the DEZ-New Hebrides Island Arc collision zone. Although hole collapse prevented the penetration of the décollement, we successfully cored the overlying thrust sheets and accretionary prism and may have entered the upper reaches of the décollement zone. Tectonic