*Makoto Otsubo1, Masataka Kinoshita2, Minoru Ikehara3, Ryuta Arai4, Ayanori Misawa1, Hiroaki Koge1, Katsura Kameo5, Chiori Tamura5, Ryoji Toda5, Stephen P. Obrochta6, Takanori Kagoshima7, Tomohiro Toki8, Daisuke Kuwano9, Seiya Fujishima9, Akane Yamamoto1,10, Natsuki Nomura11, Aya Osanai11, Keita Kono11, Issui Ikuma11, Chika Onai12, Yusei Miyamoto12, Yuka Taira8, Yu Miyagi8, Soma Sato6, Michelle M. Nishimoto13,1, Yukihiko Nakano14, Hikaru Iwamaru15, Yu Suzuki16
(1.Geological Survey of Japan, AIST, 2.ERI, The University of Tokyo, 3.Marine Core Research Institute, Kochi University, 4.JAMSTEC, 5.AORI, The University of Tokyo, 6.Akita University, 7.Toyama University, 8.The University of Ryukyus, 9.Kyoto University, 10.Nihon University, 11.Kochi University, 12.Chiba University, 13.Japan Women's University, 14.Marine Works Japan Ltd., 15.Nippon Marine Enterprises, Ltd., 16.MOL Marine & Engineering Co., Ltd.)
Keywords:Okinawa Trough, Backarc basin, Normal fault, Ryukyu arc, Scientific Drilling
As a preliminary report, this presentation provides an overview of the Hakuho-maru KH-23-11 cruise in the southern part of Okinawa Trough, which was conducted from December 28th, 2023 to January 11th, 2024. The Okinawa Trough (East China Sea) is a back-arc basin located on the Eurasian Plate and is an early stage of thinning of the continental crust, which has been undergoing intermittent spreading (rifting) for 2 million years. It is not clear how the crust thins during this stage and what factors promote this thinning. In this study, we focused on the possibility of crustal weakening caused by fluid migration and thermal condition along faults in the early stage of back-arc basin development, and conducted seismic reflection surveys and bathymetric surveys over a wide area, focusing on the Yaeyama and Yonaguni rifts in the southern part of the Okinawa Trough, where the spreading is most advanced, and conducted seismic reflection surveys at several locations in the two rifts. In the KH-23-11 Cruse, at several points in both rifts, we collected sediments filling the Okinawa Troughs by piston coring, extract water and gas from the collected sediments, measure crustal heat flow around the trough axes, and conduct water sampling and CTD observations.
Acknowledgments: We would like to express our sincere gratitude to the Operation Department of the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, the staff of the Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute of the University of Tokyo, and the crew of the Hakuho-maru for their hard work in making this cruise possible.