日本地球惑星科学連合2018年大会

講演情報

[EJ] 口頭発表

セッション記号 S (固体地球科学) » S-CG 固体地球科学複合領域・一般

[S-CG58] 沈み込み帯へのインプットを探る:海溝海側で生じる過程の影響

2018年5月23日(水) 09:00 〜 10:30 302 (幕張メッセ国際会議場 3F)

コンビーナ:山野 誠(東京大学地震研究所)、森下 知晃(金沢大学理工研究域自然システム学系)、藤江 剛(海洋研究開発機構)、座長:尾鼻 浩一郎(海洋研究開発機構)、森下 知晃(金沢大学)

09:00 〜 09:15

[SCG58-01] 熱流量分布から推測されるプチスポット火山体を通しての流体循環

*山野 誠1川田 佳史2濱元 栄起3 (1.東京大学地震研究所、2.東北大学災害科学国際研究所、3.埼玉県環境科学国際センター)

キーワード:流体循環、プチスポット、熱流量、海洋地殻、日本海溝、アウターライズ

The uppermost part of oceanic crust, several hundred meters thick, has a high permeability. Detailed heat flow measurements in ocean basins indicate that active pore fluid circulation exists in this permeable layer even at very old ages over 100 Ma. Fluid circulation beneath old seafloor is generally not connected to the ocean because it is covered by thick, less permeable sediments. If there are outcrops of permeable basement, however, ventilated circulation connected with seawater can take place and may discharge heat efficiently.
On the incoming Pacific plate off the Japan Trench, petit-spot volcanism on and around the outer rise may have provided pathways for such ventilated fluid circulation. Closely-spaced heat flow measurements conducted around a young petit-spot volcanic knoll, located seaward of the outer rise, showed that heat flow is anomalously low within 2 km of the knoll. It strongly indicates that fluid circulation through the inside of the knoll discharges heat advectively, resulting in low conductive heat flow in the close vicinity of the knoll. Although the extent and pattern of circulation cannot be constrained by the present heat flow data, it is possible that fluid flow through the knoll is connected with circulation in the permeable layer in the oceanic crust through subsurface volcanic edifice, which may be highly permeable.
Recent seismic surveys on the outer rise of the Japan Trench around 38oN revealed that the sediment layer above the acoustic basement is anomalously thin in the area where numerous petit-spot volcanoes have been found. The thin sediment cover may have arisen from pervasive intrusion of petit-spot magma forming wide-spread sills within pelagic sediments. In this petit-spot area, many small volcanic knolls, which extruded out from the sediment, might be acting as fluid conduits penetrating through sediment layers. It is therefore possible that there exist large fluid circulation systems consisting of volcanic knolls, sills and the permeable layer in oceanic crust. Detailed heat flow survey and geochemical analyses of pore fluid and bottom water would allow us to examine the existence and the nature of such circulation systems. Fluid flow through petit-spot knolls and sills can also be important as pathways for water infiltration into deeper part of oceanic crust which was fractured due to bending of the incoming plate associated with subduction.