After coring the upper 215 m of the section via advanced hydraulic piston (APC) and extended core barrel (XCB) coring until refusal, the reentry hole was initiated using the rotary core barrel (RCB) and drilled to 550 m below seafloor (mbsf), at which point a model LH (Lamar Hayes) reentry minicone was deployed to take advantage of a calm weather window for that operation. The hole was continued to 742 mbsf, at which point a successful reentry procedure was conducted to change the bit. The hole was then drilled to a total depth of 935 m, where a failed flapper valve allowed massive backflow of sediments into the bottom hole assembly (BHA), preventing further operations (including logging) at this site.Aside from the sediment recovered from the BHA, little material was trapped in cores (i.e., in core-catcher socks) taken over the basal 157 SITE 748 27 m of the hole, perhaps due to the malfunction of the flapper valve and/or to excessive ship heave. Nevertheless, average core recovery over the last 95 m prior to these problems was 70%; this is the deepest penetration yet achieved with a minicone upon reentry.The following lithologic units were recognized at Site 748:Unit I (0-13.3 mbsf): upper Pleistocene to lower Pliocene diatom ooze with radiolarian-and foraminifer-enriched intervals, dropstones, and ice-rafted debris.Unit II (13.3-389.1 mbsf): upper Miocene to upper Paleocene nannofossil ooze, chalk, Porcellanite, and chert divisible into two subunits.Subunit IIA (13.3-180.6 mbsf): upper Miocene to middle Eocene nannofossil ooze with biosiliceous intervals.Subunit HB (180.6-389.1 mbsf): middle Eocene to upper Paleocene nannofossil ooze, chalk, Porcellanite, and chert.Unit III (389.1-898.8 mbsf): upper Paleocene to upper AlbianTuronian glauconitic packstones, wackestones, siltstones, and claystones, in part silicified and divided into three subdivisions.Subunit IIIA (389.1-692.0 mbsf): upper Paleocene to upper Campanian glauconitic rud-, pack-, and grainstones, intermittently silicified, with intervals of abundant bryozoans, inoceramid prisms, and crinoid columnals, plus rare red algal debris.Subunit IIIB (692.0-897.6 mbsf): upper Albian to Turonian sandstones, siltstones, and claystones.Subunit UIC (897.6-898.8 mbsf): basalt cobble conglomerate consisting of rounded, altered basalt cobbles and boulders, broken thick-walled mollusc fragments, and a matrix of glauconitic, calcareous siltstone. No baked contact is evident, but sparry calcite veins are common.Unit IV (898.8-935.0 mbsf): highly altered basalt flow and underlying lithologies, undated but subdivided into two units.Subunit IVA (898.8-902.2 mbsf): sparsely clinopyroxene and plagioclase phyric basalt, strongly weathered and altered.Subunit IVB (902.2-935.0 mbsf): predominantly downhole cavings from Unit III plus some lithologies not encountered above. All of this material was recovered only as fragments in core-catcher socks or in the BHA; no intact cores were retrieved. Lithologies not observed previously are (1) red and green smectitic clay with goethi...