Sun, Z., Jian, Z., Stock, J.M., Larsen, H.C., Klaus, A., Alvarez Zarikian, C.A., and the Expedition
367/368 Scientists
Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program Volume 367/368
publications.iodp.org
Contents
https://doi.org/10.14379/iodp.proc.367368.109.2018
Site U15051
Zhimin Jian, Hans Christian Larsen, Carlos A. Alvarez Zarikian, Zhen Sun,
Joann M. Stock, Adam Klaus, Jacopo Boaga, Stephen A. Bowden, Anne Briais,
Yifeng Chen, Deniz Cukur, Kelsie A. Dadd, Weiwei Ding, Michael J. Dorais,
Eric C. Ferré, Fabricio Ferreira, Akira Furusawa, Aaron J. Gewecke,
Jessica L. Hinojosa, Tobias W. Höfig, Kan-Hsi Hsiung, Baoqi Huang,
Enqing Huang, Xiao-Long Huang, Shijun Jiang, Haiyan Jin, Benjamin G. Johnson,
Robert M. Kurzawski, Chao Lei, Baohua Li, Li Li, Yanping Li, Jian Lin, Chang Liu,
Chuanlian Liu, Zhifei Liu, Antonio Luna, Claudia Lupi, Anders J. McCarthy,
Geoffroy Mohn, Lachit Singh Ningthoujam, Michael Nirrengarten,
Nobuaki Osono, David W. Peate, Patricia Persaud, Ning Qiu,
Caroline M. Robinson, Sara Satolli, Isabel Sauermilch, Julie C. Schindlbeck,
Steven M. Skinner, Susanne M. Straub, Xiang Su, Liyan Tian,
Froukje M. van der Zwan, Shiming Wan, Huaichun Wu, Rong Xiang, Rajeev Yadav,
Liang Yi, Cuimei Zhang, Jinchang Zhang, Yang Zhang, Ning Zhao, Guangfa
Zhong, and Lifeng Zhong2
1
5
6
9
14
14
19
22
27
31
34
38
Site summary
Background and objectives
Operations
Lithostratigraphy
Structural geology
Biostratigraphy
Paleomagnetism
Geochemistry
Physical properties
Downhole measurements
Correlation to seismic data
References
Keywords: International Ocean Discovery Program, IODP, JOIDES Resolution, Expedition 367,
Expedition 368, Site U1505, northern South China Sea, continent–ocean transition zone,
outer margin high, hyperextension, continental breakup, thinning, rifting, T60 unconformity,
Oligocene, high sedimentation rate, greigite
Site summary
Background and objectives
Site U1505 (proposed Site SCSII-3D; Sun et al., 2016) is located
at 2916.6 m water depth on a broad regional basement high (Figure
F1). This site was an alternate to Site U1501, should time be left for
drilling following completion of the high-priority sites included in
the Scientific Prospectus (Sun et al., 2016). Site U1505 was included
in Expedition 368 because it might complement findings at Site
U1501 and it was within the operational limits of 3400 m drill string
imposed by the failure of the drawworks.
Both Sites U1505 and U1501 are located on the same structural
high at similar water depths and are 10.5 km apart (Figure F2). The
seismic section at Site U1505 generally shows a more horizontal orientation of the seismic reflectors and concordant relationship of the
strata than the one at Site U1501, indicating the sediment sequence
at Site U1505 should be more complete. The key objective at Site
U1505 was to sample the stratigraphic record above seismic unconformity T80 (inferred before drilling to be ~38 Ma in age), and spe-
1
cific goals were to constrain both (1) the sediment responses to the
tectonic events and basin evolution since the Eocene and (2) Neogene paleoceanographic and paleoclimatological changes along the
northern South China Sea (SCS) margin.
The relatively shallow 2916.6 m water depth at Site U1505
makes it one of the few Ocean Drilling Program (ODP)/Integrated
Ocean Drilling Program/International Ocean Discovery Program
(IODP) sites above the modern carbonate compensation depth
(CCD) of the SCS. The site’s hemipelagic deposits, rich in calcareous microfossils, enable the application of stable isotopes, faunal
analyses, and other multidisciplinary methods. Key objectives were
to reconstruct the east Asian monsoonal climate record in the SCS
and upper- and deep-water variations in the western Pacific. Site
U1505 will, for the first time, provide an almost continuous sequence of paleoceanographic studies at orbital and millennial timescales since the late Eocene in the SCS. We cored two holes at this
site with the advanced piston corer (APC) system to obtain a continuous record of the Pliocene–Pleistocene interval for high-resolution paleoceanographic studies.
Jian, Z., Larsen, H.C., Alvarez Zarikian, C.A., Sun, Z., Stock, J.M., Klaus, A., Boaga, J., Bowden, S.A., Briais, A., Chen, Y., Cukur, D., Dadd, K.A., Ding, W., Dorais, M.J., Ferré, E.C., Ferreira, F.,
Furusawa, A., Gewecke, A.J., Hinojosa, J.L., Höfig, T.W., Hsiung, K.-H., Huang, B., Huang, E., Huang, X.-L., Jiang, S., Jin, H., Johnson, B.G., Kurzawski, R.M., Lei, C., Li, B., Li, L., Li, Y., Lin, J.,
Liu, C., Liu, C., Liu, Z., Luna, A., Lupi, C., McCarthy, A.J., Mohn, G., Ningthoujam, L.S., Nirrengarten, M., Osono, N., Peate, D.W., Persaud, P., Qui, N., Robinson, C.M., Satolli, S., Sauermilch,
I., Schindlbeck, J.C., Skinner, S.M., Straub, S.M., Su, X., Tian, L., van der Zwan, F.M., Wan, S., Wu, H., Xiang, R., Yadav, R., Yi, L., Zhang, C., Zhang, J., Zhang, Y., Zhao, N., Zhong, G., and
Zhong, L., 2018. Site U1505. In Sun, Z., Jian, Z., Stock, J.M., Larsen, H.C., Klaus, A., Alvarez Zarikian, C.A., and the Expedition 367/368 Scientists. South China Sea Rifted Margin. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 367/368: College Station, TX (International Ocean Discovery Program). https://doi.org/10.14379/iodp.proc.367368.109.2018
2 Expedition 367/368 Scientists’ addresses.
MS 367368-109: Published 28 September 2018
This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license.
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F1. Bathymetry with seismic lines, Site U1505. Note that the site is not
at the exact crossing of seismic Lines 04ec1555 and 15ecLW1. Seismic profiles across Site U1505 are shown in Figures F5 and F6. Common depth point
(CDP) numbers are shown along seismic lines.
0
520
0
515
0
510
0
505
0
500
50
49
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490
0
485
0
480
50
47
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470
00
61
ec
L
50
60
00
60
U1505
50
59
18°55'
- 2670
00
59
A
- 2730
- 3 10 0
-
115°54'
3 km
WGS 84/*Mercator (1SP)
0
S2
- 3720
OB
9
8
7
-3000
-4000
East Subbasin
11
Relict ridge
- 3780
-5000
- 3840
7
- 3900
6b
114°E
115°55' Bathymetry
(m)
116°
-6000
118°
B
15ec
LW9
0
02
04
1
ec
50
O
04
U1435
-2
06
24
c26
09e
0
S2
OB
18.40°
U1502
U1499
15 ec LW 3
ec
15
15
08
ec
27
14
55
1
9
30
20
9
So u t h C h i n a Sea
09
-1
26
15
15
ec
5-2
ec
20
Lithostratigraphy
08
96
73
ec
11
15
26
ec
ec
08
08
08
17.80°
10
08
08
10
78
02
U1503
15 ec LW 5
0
6 610
16
U1500
15 ec LW 4
ec
91
2
ec
39
14
08
18.00°
26
08
11
ec
18.20°
ec
11
U1432
09
11
04
2015-4
-3
15e
1
DP
15
91
14
ec
08
18.60°
6a
260
c
08e
1148
8
14
2
cLW
20
g
km
05
4
OBS2006-3
5
0 1
9
25
OD
P0
U1504
W1
ecL
9
18.80°
U1505
U1501
44
16
ec
09
29
16
ec
09
02
16
ec
08
6
LW
ec
15
93
OBS19
573
04ec1
7
LW
ec
15
53
ec1
04
19.00°
Four holes were cored with the APC and extended core barrel
(XCB) systems at Site U1505. In Hole U1505A (18°55.0560′N,
115°51.5369′E; 2916.6 m water depth), Core 1H misfired and recovered only 0.3 m. In Hole U1505B (18°55.0562′N, 115°51.5370′E;
2918.6 m water depth), a 3.23 m long mudline core was recovered
for future education and outreach activities. Hole U1505C
(18°55.0570′N, 115°51.5370′E; 2917.4 m water depth) was cored
with the APC system to 317 m and then cored with the XCB system
to 480.2 m, recovering 480.15 m (100%). Hole U1505D
(18°55.0485′N, 115°51.5501′E; 2917.5 m water depth) was cored
with the APC system to 184.5 m and recovered 191.43 m (104%).
Downhole logging with a modified triple combination (triple
combo) tool string was conducted in Hole U1505C from 341.2 m
uphole. The maximum drilling depth of 480.2 m was determined by
the possible maximum total length (3400 m) of drill string deployment.
55
15
ec
04
W8
ecL
15
19.20°
N
Operations
115.40°E 115.60° 115.80° 116.00°
116.20° 116.40°
116.60° 116.80°
-2000 -2200 -2400 -2600 -2800 -3000 -3200 -3400 -3600 -3800 -4000
The sediment succession recovered at Site U1505 extends from
the Oligocene to the Pleistocene. Two sedimentary units (I and II)
were observed (Figure F3). Lithostratigraphic Unit I is dominated
by nannofossil ooze with varying amounts of foraminifers and clay,
as well as biogenic silica in the upper interval of the hole. Unit I is
divided into three subunits (IA–IC). Subunit IA (Hole U1505C =
0.00–27.76 m) is composed of dark greenish gray and greenish gray
biosiliceous-rich clay with nannofossils, nannofossil-rich clay with
biogenic silica, and nannofossil-rich biosiliceous ooze with clay. The
abundance of biogenic silica decreases downhole. A pinkish gray, ~6
cm thick, slightly fining upward ash layer occurs at 20.8 m (Hole
U1505C), and ash pods were observed at 20.3 m in Hole U1505D.
Subunit IB (Hole U1505C = 27.76–273.39 m) is composed of gray to
brown nannofossil ooze with minor silty intervals. The color change
IODP Proceedings
B
-2
06
30
3 0
0 0
2
01
S20
OB
1
115°53'
11
11
- 3630
-2000
10
U1503
1
ine
7-l
00
T2
0
P-E
ES
1
115°52'
U1499
U1500
10
18°
- 3570
11
11
U1435
U1432
e2
115°51'
- 3510
0
-1000
1148
U1502
0
00
50
52
- 3420
1000
-4
00
53
U1504
11
n
8-li
00
T2
115°50'E
03
20
2
LW
0
0 0
- 3
- 3360
P-W
00
54
50
53
ec
U1505
U1501
- 3300
ES
50
54
- 2
9 0
0
15
BS
O
0
835
0
840
0
845
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865
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870
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ec
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890
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915
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50
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945
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0
955
0
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0
965
00
55
18°51'
PRMB
- 3210
0
560
50
55
18°52'
2000
TWNB
- 3150
50
56
- 28 0 0
Topography
(m)
3000
TXB
1000
20°
N
- 3090
0
OBS2006-3
- 3000
-1
570
- 2940
1993
OBS
-C
ESP
0
0
20
010
575
-1
006
S2
OB
- 2880
00
58
18°54'
18°53'
S2
OB
- 2790
50
58
97 30 1c
15
W1
00
18°56'
N
Figure F2. Bathymetric maps showing Expedition 367/368 sites (stars), and
(A) regional and (B) local coverage of multichannel seismic reflection data
and OBS data. Thick blue and red lines are key seismic lines used for planning of the drilling transect. A. Magnetic isochrons (orange lines) from Briais
et al. (1993). B. Magnetic picks (orange squares) from the same reference,
extracted from the Seton et al. (2014) compilation. Chron labels for the picks
correspond to the old edge of the normal polarity intervals (see Ogg et al.
[2016] timescale for ages). Orange square = Leg 184 Site 1148, yellow
squares = Expedition 349 Sites U1432 and U1435.
Bathymetry (m)
reflects the varying abundance of foraminifers and clay. Subunit IC
(Hole U1505C = 273.39–403.79 m) is composed of gray, greenish
gray, and light brownish gray clay-rich nannofossil ooze (with foraminifers) and foraminifer-rich nannofossil ooze with clay and minor
amounts of nannofossil-rich clay. Unit II (Hole U1505C = 403.50–
480.54 m) is dominated by dark greenish gray, well-consolidated
silty clay and clayey silt (with nannofossils).
Biostratigraphy
All core catcher samples from Holes U1505A–U1505C were analyzed for calcareous nannofossils, planktonic foraminifers, and diatoms. Additional samples were taken from intervals within the
2
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
0
late
early
late
Oligocene
middle
early
late
early
late Ecoene
Miocene
Plio.
0
IA
Calcareous nannofossils
20
3H
Planktonic foraminifers
24 mm/ky
4H
40
early
middle
Lithology
Pleist.
1H
2H
20
Core image
Core
Recovery
Lith. unit
Figure F3. Lithostratigraphic and biostratigraphic summary, Site U1505.
Magnetostratigraphy datum
40
5H
6H
60
60
7H
8H
80
9H
U1505D
80
10H
100
11H
100
12H
120
13H
120
14H
140
15H
140
16H
IB
17H
160
160
18H
19H
180
180
20H
21H
200
200
22H
23H
24F
25F
220
27F
28F
29F
240
30F
31F
32F
33F
260
34F
Depth (m)
26F
U1505C
Depth (m)
220
15 mm/ky
240
260
35F
36F
37F
280
38F
39F
40F
280
41F
42F
43F
300
300
44F
45F
46F
47F
320
320
48X
49X
340
50X
IC
340
51X
360
360
52X
53X
380
380
54X
Sandy silt
Silty clay
Foraminiferal sand
Biosiliceous clay and clay with
biogenic silica
Clayey silt/silty clay
with nannofossils
Nannofossil-rich clay
Clay-rich nannofossil ooze
(Foraminifer-rich) nannofossil ooze
55X
400
400
56X
57X
420
58X
420
59X
440
60X
II
440
61X
460
62X
460
7 mm/ky
63X
64X
480
480
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Age (Ma)
working-half sections when necessary to refine the ages. Hole
U1505D was not sampled continuously for biostratigraphic analyses
because of time constraints at the end of the expedition, but the sequence recovered spans from the late Miocene to the present (Figure F3). Preservation of calcareous microfossils is good in Cores
368-U1505C-1H through 48X and moderate to poor in Cores 49X
through 64X. Planktonic foraminifers are abundant or common in
Cores 1H through 56X and 59X through 62X and rare in Cores 57X,
IODP Proceedings
58X, 63X, and 64X. Calcareous nannofossils are generally abundant
to common in most samples from Hole U1505C, except for those
from the upper part of Core 57X.
Forty-five biostratigraphic datums identified in Hole U1505C
suggest a continuous succession from the early Oligocene to the
Holocene (Figure F3). The Pleistocene/Pliocene boundary is placed
within Core 7H, the Pliocene/Miocene boundary is placed between
Cores 11H and 13H, and the Miocene/Oligocene boundary is
3
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F4. Data characterizing chemical anomalies associated with the T60 regional seismic marker, Site U1505.
TOC TS
(%)
0
1
Sulfate
2
0
Ammonium
(mM)
10
20
Methane
(ppm)
1
100
Cl
(mM)
520
540
Porosity
(%)
560 580 0
20
40
60
0
Depth (m)
200
T60
400
600
Geochemistry
placed between Cores 54X and 55X. Sedimentation rates are ~7
mm/ky in the Oligocene, ~15 mm/ky during the Miocene–Pliocene,
and ~24 mm/ky during the Pleistocene.
Relatively low abundances of planktonic foraminifers deeper
than Core 57X indicate bathyal depths during the early Oligocene,
whereas much higher abundances of planktonic foraminifers shallower than Core 56X suggest a deeper water environment since the
late Oligocene.
Low but measurable hydrocarbon gases were detected only in
Cores 368-U1505C-53X through 60X (371–438 m). The base of the
hole has methane distributions similar to those at Site U1499,
whereas the uppermost section is barren of methane, similar to Site
U1501. Except for the shallowest 30 m of sediment, total organic
carbon (TOC), total nitrogen (TN), and total sulfur (TS) contents
are mostly low in lithostratigraphic Unit I, but TS and TOC are
slightly higher in Unit II; however, in all cases they are typically <1
wt% (Figure F4). Interstitial water chemistry has two important features. The upper part of the hole exhibits patterns similar to those at
Site U1501; inhibited sulfate reduction and low chlorine, bromine,
and salinity suggest the presence of freshwater at depth. Freshwater
at >400 m coincides with the presence of low quantities of methane
and the T60 regional seismic unconformity.
Paleomagnetism
Only natural remanent magnetization (NRM) was measured
with the superconducting rock magnetometer (SRM) in Hole
U1505C, except for Sections 1H-1 through 3H-1, which were in-line
alternating field (AF) demagnetized in three steps. Most of the 55
AF demagnetized discrete samples show very soft magnetic behavior responsible for the acquisition of a strong, vertical drilling overprint (average inclination = ~81°) that was removed by
demagnetization to 10–15 mT. This soft behavior shows that magnetic remanence is dominated by multidomain to pseudosingle-domain titanomagnetite or magnetite. The drilling overprint appears
to impact discrete samples far less than core sections (Figure F19).
The lower part of the hole (Cores 48X through 64X) is characterized
by severe drilling disturbance, which causes a large scatter of NRM
directions and inclinations.
Magnetostratigraphic data are based on polarities assigned to
the archive-half sections and corroborated by directions obtained
from oriented discrete samples. The lower boundary of the Brunhes
(C1n) normal chron is at 37.4 m (0.781 Ma). The lower boundary
(57.4 m) of the reverse polarity r1 is the base of Subchron C1r.3r
with an age of 1.778 Ma.
IODP Proceedings
Physical properties and downhole measurements
Physical property data were acquired from cores from Holes
U1505C (0–480.5 m) and U1505D (0–184 m), including density,
magnetic susceptibility, P-wave velocity, natural gamma radiation
(NGR), color reflectance, and thermal conductivity. Physical property trends allow us to define two physical property units, PP Units
1 (0–403 m) and 2 (403–480 m). The boundary between Units 1 and
2 displays a distinct color change from greenish and light brownish
gray to dark greenish gray. This boundary, which corresponds to the
seismic stratigraphic T60 unconformity, is associated with a sharp
change in physical properties. In Unit 1, sediments in the upper part
are composed of foraminifer-rich nannofossil ooze with clay that
gradually changes to clay-rich nannofossil ooze in the lower part.
4
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Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
This change is well reflected in the NGR, which increases with
depth. The higher NGR values in Unit 2 are related to sediment that
primarily consists of silty clay. Magnetic susceptibility values overall
gradually decrease with depth. The boundary between Units 1 and 2
shows that density and P-wave velocity values drop sharply from
~2.2 to ~1.8 g/cm3 and from ~2250 to 1750 m/s, respectively. Porosity values abruptly increase from ~35% to ~50%. Thermal conductivity also shows a sharp change at the boundary. Reflectance
parameters L* and red, green, blue (RGB) data are well correlated
with carbonate content.
Wireline logging was conducted in Hole U1505C using the triple
combo tool string, which included the Hostile Environment Natural
Gamma Ray Sonde (HNGS), Hostile Environment Litho-Density
Sonde (HLDS), Dipole Sonic Imager (DSI), and magnetic susceptibility sonde (MSS). This logging string collected good data from
341.2 m (139.1 m above the bottom of Hole U1505C), which allows
the definition of six logging units that mostly correlate with the
lithostratigraphic units and core physical property data. Logging
Unit 1 extends from the seafloor to the base of the drill pipe at 78 m.
NGR is highly attenuated inside the drill pipe. Logging Unit 2 (base
of the drill pipe to 96 m) exhibits NGR values that are ~50% lower
than the underlying logging Unit 3. In Unit 3 (96–136 m), NGR increases with depth. Logging Unit 4 (136–220 m) exhibits relatively
constant VP and VS. In logging Unit 5 (200–296 m), resistivity increases with depth, whereas most of the other physical properties
are relatively constant. Logging Unit 6 (296–341.2 m) has higher
magnetic susceptibility values than logging Unit 5.
Four downhole temperature measurements were conducted in
Hole U1505C using the advanced piston corer temperature tool
(APCT-3). The temperature values range from 4.7°C at 36.7 m to
11.7°C at 122.8 m, giving a geothermal gradient of 84.6°C/km. A
heat flow of 94.0 mW/m2 was obtained from the linear fit between
temperature and thermal resistance. The geothermal gradient and
heat flow at Site U1505 are comparable to the relatively high values
observed in a number of ODP and IODP sites in this part of the
SCS.
Figure F5. Site U1505 location and penetration depth on seismic dip Line
15ecLW1 (original predrilling interpretation). Seismic stratigraphic T30 (5.3
Ma), T32 (10.0 Ma), T50 (19.1 Ma), T60 (23.0 Ma), T80 (38.0 Ma), T82
(unknown age), and T83 (unknown age) unconformities and acoustic basement Tg reflector are shown (for inferred predrilling ages, see Seismic stratigraphic framework in the Expedition 367/368 methods chapter [Sun et al.,
2018]).
4200
3.5
(CDP 5077; 18.93037, 115.85142)
05kmg1558
5800
SW
1 km
U1505 (projected)
NE
Two-way traveltime (s)
4.0
4.5
5.0
5.5
6.0
CDP (6.25 m/CDP)
04ec1555
3.5
15ecLW1
(CDP 5077; 18.93037, 115.85142)
U1505 (projected)
05kmg1558
SW
1 km
NE
Two-way traveltime (s)
4.0
Background and objectives
Site U1505 is located at a water depth of 2917.4 m on a broad,
regional basement high named the outer margin high (OMH) (Figure F1). This site was an alternate for Site U1501, should time be left
for drilling following completion of the high-priority sites included
in the Scientific Prospectus. Both Sites U1505 and U1501 are located
on the same structural high at similar water depths and are only
10.46 km apart (Figure F2), so the two sites should have similar tectonic backgrounds and scientific objectives. The acoustic basement
at Site U1501 consists of highly lithified sandstones and conglomerate, most likely of pre-Cenozoic age. However, the main target for
Site U1505 was not the nature of the basement but the sediments
within the small Cenozoic half-graben basins present on the OMH.
According to the seismic profiles, the sediment sequences at the
two sites should be similar to each other and the sedimentation
rates should be suitable for high-resolution paleoceanographic and
paleoenvironmental reconstructions. The seismic reflectors (Figures F5, F6) at Site U1505 are more distinctive and in general show
a more horizontal orientation and concordant relationship of the
strata, indicating the sediment sequence here would be more complete. Therefore, Site U1505 was selected for occupation following
the failure to drill down below the cased hole at Site U1503 and the
depth limit of 3400 m (water depth plus penetration) imposed by
IODP Proceedings
15ecLW1
4600
CDP (6.25 m/CDP)
04ec1555
5000
5400
T30
4.5
T32
T50
T60
5.0
T70
T80
T82
T83
5.5
Tg
6.0
the mechanical failure of the drilling equipment (see Operations in
the Site U1503 chapter [Larsen et al., 2018b]).
Site U1505 is located near the crossing of seismic Lines
04ec1555 and 15eclLW1 (Figure F1). The predrilling interpretation
of the seismic unconformities (T30 to T83 and Tg reflector; see the
Expedition 367/368 methods chapter [Sun et al., 2018]) around
Site U1505 is shown in Figures F5 and F6. Using the velocity model
(see Physical properties and Correlation to seismic data), the
sedimentary sequence overlying the acoustic basement is ~1220 m
thick. Because of the 3400 m depth limit, the maximum targeted
drill depth at Site U1505 was 480 mbsf. The key objective at Site
U1505 was to sample the stratigraphic record representing all stages
since the T80 unconformity (including prerift sediments through
synrift to postrift fill). The specific goal was to constrain the sediment responses to the tectonic events and basin evolution since the
Eocene, as well as the Neogene paleoceanographic and paleoclimatological changes at the SCS northern margin.
Sampling sediments from the T80 unconformity (38.0 Ma; inferred age before drilling) to the T60 unconformity (23.0 Ma; in-
5
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
and millennial timescales since the late Eocene in the SCS. To
achieve this goal, relatively complete sediment sequences are required. Double APC holes were designed at this site to establish a
continuous record of the Pliocene to Pleistocene interval for highresolution paleoceanographic study.
Figure F6. Site U1505 seismic strike location and penetration depth on Line
04ec1555 (original and predrilling interpretation). See Figure F5 for description of seismic interpretations. Dashed lines = unconformities, red solid lines
= faults.
05kmg2590
6700
CDP (6.25 m/CDP)
15ecLW1
6300
5900
15ecLW2 08ec2606a
5500
5100
(CDP 5963; 18.91761, 115.85897)
04ec1555
NW
U1505 (SCSII-3D)
1 km
Operations
SE
Four holes were cored at Site U1505 (Table T1) using the APC
and XCB systems with the objective of recovering a complete sedimentary succession from the early Miocene to Holocene that can
supplement the interval sampled at Site U1501 for postexpedition
paleoceanographic and paleoclimatological studies. In Hole
U1505A (18°55.0560′N, 115°51.5369′E; 2916.6 m water depth), Core
1H misfired (shear pins) and recovered only 0.3 m. In Hole U1505B
(18°55.0562′N, 115°51.5370′E; 2918.6 m water depth), Core 1H penetrated 3 m into the seafloor, recovering 3.23 m (107%). With a good
mudline core, the hole was terminated. Hole U1505C
(18°55.0570′N, 115°51.5370′E; 2917.4 m water depth) was cored to
480.2 m, recovering 480.15 m (100%). Hole U1505D (18°55.0485′N,
115°51.5501′E; 2917.5 m water depth) was cored to 184.5 m, recovering 191.43 m (104%). Downhole logging with a modified triple
combo tool was conducted in Hole U1505C.
Two-way traveltime (s)
4.0
4.5
5.0
5.5
CDP (6.25 m/CDP)
05kmg2590
15ecLW1
04ec1555
Two-way traveltime (s)
4.0
4.5
T30
T32
T50
08ec2606a
NW
U1505
1 km
SE
Transit to Site U1505
The R/V JOIDES Resolution began the transit from Site U1504
to Site U1505 at 1854 h on 28 May 2017 and arrived on site at 2112
h the same day. The thrusters were lowered, and the heading was
controlled at 2148 h, beginning operations at Site U1505.
T70
T60
T80
T82
5.0
15ecLW2
(CDP 5963; 18.91761, 115.85897)
Holes U1505A and U1505B
Tg
T83
An APC/XCB bottom-hole assembly (BHA) was made up, and a
precision depth recorder (PDR) measurement was taken to help determine the seafloor depth. As the drill string was being lowered to
the seafloor, we deployed the subsea camera system to observe the
end of the pipe tag the seafloor. APC coring started in Hole U1505A
at 0545 h on 29 May 2017 at a water depth of 2916.6 m. With the bit
at 2911.2 m, the core barrel was recovered to the surface after an
apparent misfire (failed shear pins) of the APC. The barrel had 0.38
m of core, far less than anticipated, and the hole was terminated at
1200 h to attempt a better mudline.
The bit was spaced out to 2912.1 m below sea level (mbsl), and
coring in Hole U1505B started at 1235 h on 29 May. The core was
recovered with 3.23 m of sediment. With a good mudline core, Hole
U1505B was terminated at 1300 h.
5.5
ferred age before drilling) will help us determine the environment
before the SCS ocean basin formed, particularly the history of paleowater depth changes from shallow water to deep sea. The basinwide T60 unconformity is a strong negative reflector showing conformable relationships below and above Site U1505. The nature of
this profound reflector is an important objective together with the
post-T60 stratigraphic interval, which is also expected to provide
information to constrain the rate of thermal subsidence following
initial tectonic subsidence recorded within the Eocene to early Oligocene sediments.
The younger stratigraphy above the T60 unconformity is the focus of the Neogene environmental development of the SCS and adjacent landmasses of Southeast Asia. The relatively shallow water
depth of 2916.6 m at Site U1505 makes it one of the few ODP/IODP
sites above the modern CCD of the SCS. Its hemipelagic deposits
rich in calcareous microfossils enable the application of stable isotopes, faunal analyses, and other multidisciplinary methods. Key
objectives of this interval sampled by a number of ODP/IODP sites
are reconstruction of (1) the East Asian monsoonal climate changes
of the SCS and surrounding land and (2) upper and deep-water variations in the western Pacific. For the first time, Site U1505 will underpin an almost continuous oxygen isotope sequence at the orbital
IODP Proceedings
Hole U1505C
The vessel was offset 20 m east, and the bit was spaced out to
2916.1 mbsl. Because of a leak in the newly replaced low clutch diaphragm, the decision was made to core with the APC system and
then core with the XCB system to refusal or to the maximum drill
string weight that could be lifted using the high clutch (whichever
came first). Hole U1505C (18°55.0570′N, 115°51.5370′E) was
started at 1340 h on 29 May 2017. Seafloor was calculated at 2917.4
mbsl based on recovery from Core 1H. The full-length APC system
was used to refusal at 207.1 m with APCT-3 temperature measurements taken on Cores 4H, 7H, 10H, and 13H. All four deployments
produced good temperature data. APC refusal was determined after
partial strokes on five consecutive cores, beginning with Core 19H
and continuing through Core 23H. The half-length APC (HLAPC)
system was then deployed and used to recover Cores 24F through
6
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Table T1. Site U1505 core summary. DRF = drilling depth below rig floor, DSF = drilling depth below seafloor. NA = not applicable. Core type: H = advanced piston corer (APC), F = half-length APC, XCB = extended core barrel. APCT-3 = advanced piston corer temperature tool. (Continued on next page.) Download
available in CSV format.
Hole U1505A
Latitude:
Longitude:
Seafloor (drill pipe measurement below rig floor, m DRF):
Time on hole (days):
Total depth (drill pipe measurement from rig floor, m DRF):
Distance between rig floor and sea level (m):
Total penetration (drilling depth below seafloor, m DSF):
Total length of cored section (m):
Total core recovered (m):
Core recovery (%):
Drilled interval (m):
Total cores (no.):
18°55.0506′N
115° 51.5369′E
2916.57
0.59
2928
11.43
0.3
0.3
0.38
126.67
NA
1
Hole U1505B
Latitude:
Longitude:
Seafloor (drill pipe measurement below rig floor, m DRF):
Time on hole (days):
Total depth (drill pipe measurement from rig floor, m DRF):
Distance between rig floor and sea level (m):
Total penetration (drilling depth below seafloor, m DSF):
Total length of cored section (m):
Total core recovered (m):
Core recovery (%):
Drilled interval (m):
Total cores (no.):
18°55.0562′N
115°51.5370′E
2918.57
0.04
2930
11.43
3
3
3.23
107.67
NA
1
Hole U1505C
Latitude:
Longitude:
Seafloor (drill pipe measurement below rig floor, m DRF):
Time on hole (days):
Total depth (drill pipe measurement from rig floor, m DRF):
Distance between rig floor and sea level (m):
Total penetration (drilling depth below seafloor, m DSF):
Total length of cored section (m):
Total core recovered (m):
Core recovery (%):
Drilled interval (m):
Total cores (no.):
18°55.0570′N
115°51.5491′E
2917.37
4.29
2928.8
11.43
480.2
480.2
480.15
99.99
NA
64
Hole U1501D
Latitude:
Longitude:
Seafloor (drill pipe measurement below rig floor, m DRF):
Time on hole (days):
Total depth (drill pipe measurement from rig floor, m DRF):
Distance between rig floor and sea level (m):
Total penetration (drilling depth below seafloor, m DSF):
Total length of cored section (m):
Total core recovered (m):
Core recovery (%):
Drilled interval (m):
Total cores (no.):
18°55.0458′N
115°51.5501′E
2917
1.2
2928.5
11.5
184.5
184.5
191.43
103.76
NA
20
Core
Type
368-U1505A1
H
368-U1505B1
H
368-U1505C1
H
2
H
3
H
4
H
5
H
6
H
7
H
8
H
9
H
10
H
11
H
12
H
13
H
14
H
15
H
16
H
17
H
18
H
19
H
20
H
21
H
22
H
23
H
24
F
25
F
26
F
27
F
28
F
29
F
30
F
IODP Proceedings
Top of
interval
DSF (m)
Bottom of
interval
DSF (m)
Interval
advanced
(m)
Core
recovered
Curated
length (m) length (m)
Recovery
(%)
Time on
deck UTC
(h)
0
0.3
Hole U1505A totals:
0.3
0.3
0.38
0.38
0.38
0.38
127
127
5/29/2017 03:40
0
3
Hole U1505B totals:
3
3
3.23
3.23
3.23
3.23
108
108
5/29/2017 04:55
8.2
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
9.5
8
6.4
4
4.7
4.7
4.7
4.7
4.7
4.7
4.7
8.23
9.54
8.34
9.97
9.81
10.03
10
9.75
9.48
9.45
9.08
8.53
10.01
10.03
9.62
9.7
9.97
10.08
10.05
10.06
7.83
3.36
3.95
5.08
5.12
5.04
5.13
5.03
5.09
5.02
8.23
9.54
8.34
9.97
9.81
10.03
10
9.75
9.48
9.45
9.08
8.53
10.01
10.03
9.62
9.7
9.97
10.08
10.05
10.06
7.83
3.36
3.95
5.08
5.12
5.04
5.13
5.03
5.09
5.02
100
100
88
105
103
106
105
103
100
99
96
90
105
106
101
102
105
106
106
106
98
53
99
108
109
107
109
107
108
107
5/29/2017 06:05
5/29/2017 07:05
5/29/2017 08:05
5/29/2017 09:10
5/29/2017 10:10
5/29/2017 11:10
5/29/2017 12:15
5/29/2017 13:15
5/29/2017 14:10
5/29/2017 15:25
5/29/2017 16:25
5/29/2017 17:20
5/29/2017 18:35
5/29/2017 19:30
5/29/2017 20:35
5/29/2017 21:25
5/29/2017 22:25
5/29/2017 23:30
5/30/2017 00:25
5/30/2017 01:20
5/30/2017 02:10
5/30/2017 03:05
5/30/2017 03:55
5/30/2017 05:15
5/30/2017 06:10
5/30/2017 07:00
5/30/2017 08:05
5/30/2017 09:00
5/30/2017 09:45
5/30/2017 11:10
0
8.2
17.7
27.2
36.7
46.2
55.7
65.2
74.7
84.2
93.7
103.2
112.7
122.2
131.7
141.2
150.7
160.2
169.7
179.2
188.7
196.7
203.1
207.1
211.8
216.5
221.2
225.9
230.6
235.3
8.2
17.7
27.2
36.7
46.2
55.7
65.2
74.7
84.2
93.7
103.2
112.7
122.2
131.7
141.2
150.7
160.2
169.7
179.2
188.7
196.7
203.1
207.1
211.8
216.5
221.2
225.9
230.6
235.3
240
7
Time to
cut core
(min)
Core
barrel
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Mud
pumped
(bbl)
Driller's notes
APCT-3
APCT-3
APCT-3
APCT-3
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Table T1 (continued).
Core
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
Type
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
368-U1505D1
H
2
H
3
H
4
H
5
H
6
H
7
H
8
H
9
H
10
H
11
H
12
H
13
H
14
H
15
H
16
H
17
H
18
H
19
H
20
H
Top of
interval
DSF (m)
Bottom of
interval
DSF (m)
Interval
advanced
(m)
Core
recovered
Curated
length (m) length (m)
Recovery
(%)
Time to
cut core
(min)
Core
barrel
240
244.7
4.7
244.7
249.4
4.7
249.4
254.1
4.7
254.1
258.8
4.7
258.8
263.5
4.7
263.5
268.2
4.7
268.2
272.9
4.7
272.9
277.6
4.7
277.6
279.4
1.8
279.4
284.1
4.7
284.1
288.8
4.7
288.8
293.5
4.7
293.5
298.2
4.7
298.2
302.9
4.7
302.9
307.6
4.7
307.6
312.3
4.7
312.3
317
4.7
317
326.8
9.8
326.8
336.5
9.7
336.5
346.1
9.6
346.1
355.6
9.5
355.6
365.2
9.6
365.2
374.7
9.5
374.7
384.3
9.6
384.3
393.9
9.6
393.9
403.5
9.6
403.5
413.2
9.7
413.2
422.8
9.6
422.8
432.4
9.6
432.4
442
9.6
442
451.6
9.6
451.6
461.1
9.5
461.1
470.7
9.6
470.7
480.2
9.5
Hole U1505C totals: 480.2
5.02
5.04
5.06
5.07
5.03
5.03
4.81
5.05
1.8
5.04
4.91
5.03
4.72
5.01
5.02
3.14
2.6
9.93
9.9
9.62
9.87
9.38
9.35
9.23
9.81
9.94
9.99
6.38
7.46
9.91
9.93
9.86
9.99
9.84
480.15
5.02
5.04
5.06
5.07
5.03
5.03
4.81
5.05
1.8
5.04
4.91
5.03
4.72
5.01
5.02
3.14
2.6
9.93
9.9
9.62
9.87
9.38
9.37
9.25
9.81
9.94
9.99
6.38
7.46
9.91
9.93
9.89
9.99
9.84
480.15
107
107
108
108
107
107
102
107
100
107
104
107
100
107
107
67
55
101
102
100
104
98
98
96
102
104
103
66
78
103
103
104
104
104
100
5/30/2017 11:55
5/30/2017 12:50
5/30/2017 13:45
5/30/2017 14:40
5/30/2017 15:35
5/30/2017 16:30
5/30/2017 17:20
5/30/2017 18:10
5/30/2017 20:00
5/30/2017 21:30
5/30/2017 22:30
5/30/2017 23:15
5/30/2017 00:00
5/31/2017 00:50
5/31/2017 01:40
5/31/2017 02:40
5/31/2017 03:35
5/31/2017 05:55
5/31/2017 08:15
5/31/2017 10:25
5/31/2017 13:20
5/31/2017 16:10
5/31/2017 18:15
5/31/2017 20:40
5/31/2017 23:10
6/1/2017 01:45
6/1/2017 03:40
6/1/2017 06:15
6/1/2017 09:40
6/1/2017 12:45
6/1/2017 15:20
6/1/2017 17:40
6/1/2017 20:00
6/1/2017 22:30
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
0
4
4
4
13.5
9.5
13.5
23
9.5
23
32.5
9.5
32.5
42
9.5
42
51.5
9.5
51.5
61
9.5
61
70.5
9.5
70.5
80
9.5
80
89.5
9.5
89.5
99
9.5
99
108.5
9.5
108.5
118
9.5
118
127.5
9.5
127.5
137
9.5
137
146.5
9.5
146.5
156
9.5
156
165.5
9.5
165.5
175
9.5
175
184.5
9.5
Hole U1505D totals: 184.5
Site U1505 totals: 668.0
3.95
9.62
9.78
9.8
9.92
9.91
10.01
9.98
9.91
9.84
10.1
9.94
9.78
9.82
9.17
10.1
9.66
10.14
10.18
9.82
191.43
675.19
3.95
9.62
9.78
9.8
9.92
9.91
10.01
9.98
9.91
9.84
10.1
9.94
9.78
9.82
9.17
10.1
9.66
10.14
10.18
9.82
191.43
675.19
99
101
103
103
104
104
105
105
104
104
106
105
103
103
97
106
102
107
107
103
101
101
6/2/2017 14:20
6/2/2017 15:15
6/2/2017 16:20
6/2/2017 17:35
6/2/2017 18:25
6/2/2017 19:20
6/2/2017 20:15
6/2/2017 21:10
6/2/2017 22:10
6/2/2017 23:05
6/2/2017 23:55
6/3/2017 00:45
6/3/2017 01:35
6/3/2017 02:25
6/3/2017 03:20
6/3/2017 04:10
6/3/2017 05:10
6/3/2017 06:05
6/3/2017 07:00
6/3/2017 08:10
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
Nonmagnetic
47F. All HLAPC cores were considered partial strokes, with the
standpipe retaining pressure after each core. The residual pressure
in the standpipe was bled off using the Cameron Orbit valve.
HLAPC refusal was determined with recovery of 3.14 m and 2.60 m
on Cores 46F and 47F, respectively. While bleeding pressure on
Core 47F, the diaphragm on the pneumatic actuation for the Orbit
IODP Proceedings
Time on
deck UTC
(h)
Mud
pumped
(bbl)
Driller's notes
valve failed. The pressure was bled by manually opening the valve,
and the valve was taken out of service and repaired.
The XCB system was then deployed and used to core to 480.2 m
before reaching the maximum allowable drill string weight dictated
the end of coring operations. The hole was displaced using heavy
mud, and the bit was raised to 80.1 m in preparation for logging.
8
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
A modified triple combo tool string was rigged up and lowered
into the hole. The tool string was exceptionally long, consisting of
all tools typically run as part of the triple combo (MSS; High-Resolution Laterolog Array [HRLA]; HLDS, with source; HNGS; Enhanced Digital Telemetry Cartridge [EDTC]; and logging
equipment head-q tension [LEH-QT]), with the addition of the DSI
tool for acoustic velocity. The DSI was added to the first run in anticipation of potential hole problems that might prevent subsequent
runs based on experience at nearby sites with similar lithology. The
triple combo began collecting data a few meters above the seafloor
and recorded continuously to the deepest point the tools could
reach, a firm hole obstruction at 341.2 m. The tool string was unable
to pass below that depth even after several attempts. Accordingly,
the repeat pass was conducted from that depth for a length of ~110
m, and then the main pass was also conducted from that depth up to
just above the seafloor. During the run, the triple combo collected
NGR, density (with caliper), acoustic velocity, neutron porosity, and
magnetic susceptibility data. The caliper indicated that the hole diameter was too large (>14 inches) for effectively collecting useful
data with the Formation MicroScanner (FMS) and Versatile Seismic
Imager tool strings. Therefore, the decision was made to end downhole logging operations in Hole U1505C. The tools were pulled to
the surface after logging was completed and rigged down. The bit
was then raised, clearing the seafloor at 1755 h on 2 June and ending
Hole U1505C.
Total time spent on Hole U1505C was 103 h (4.3 days). The
APC, HLAPC, and XCB systems were deployed in the hole, coring a
480.2 m interval and recovering 480.15 m (100%). The APC system
was used to cut 23 cores over a 207.1 m interval with 100% recovery.
The HLAPC system was used to cut 24 cores over a 109.9 m interval, recovering 112.9 m (103%). The XCB system recovered 160.4 m
of sediment (98%) over a 163.2 m interval. Nonmagnetic core barrels were used on all cores from this hole. All full-length APC cores
were oriented. APCT-3 temperature measurements were taken on
Cores 4H, 7H, 10H, and 13H.
ered. In Hole U1505B, only a mudline core was recovered for educational use, and the core was not described. Hole U1505C was cored
to ~480 m using the APC and XCB systems and was used to define
the lithostratigraphic unit boundaries. Hole U1505D only recovered
the upper section of lithostratigraphic Unit I. Unit I is defined and
divided into three subunits based on visual core description, smear
slide and thin section inspection, and X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis (see Lithostratigraphy in the Expedition 367/368 methods
chapter [Sun et al., 2018]).
The sediment succession recovered at Site U1505 extends from
0.00 to 480.54 m (Cores 368-U1505A-1H, 368-U1505C-1H through
64X, and 368-U1505D-1H through 20H).
Unit I is dominated by nannofossil ooze with varying amounts
of foraminifers and clay and, in the upper interval of the core, with
biogenic silica. The change downhole to Unit II is marked by a sharp
change from greenish gray nannofossil ooze (Unit I) to dark greenish gray silty clay and clayey silt with nannofossils (Unit II). The
contact between Units I and II occurs between two full-recovery
cores but may not have been fully recovered.
Unit description
Unit I
Intervals: 368-U1505A-1H-1, 0 cm, to 1H-1, 33 cm;
368-U1505C-1H-1, 0 cm, to 56X-CC, 37 cm;
368-U1505D-1H-1, 0 cm, to 20H-CC, 20 cm
Depths: Hole U1505A = 0–0.33 m; Hole U1505C = 0–403.79 m;
Hole U1505D = 0–184.82 m
Age: Pleistocene–late Oligocene
Lithology and sedimentary structures
Lithostratigraphic Unit I is dominated by nannofossil ooze with
varying amounts of foraminifers and clay. The upper part is biosiliceous-rich clay (Figure F8D) with minor nannofossil-rich biosiliceous ooze with clay. The unit is divided into three subunits, IA–IC,
based on changes in the biogenic component of the sediment and
color changes that coincide with subtle changes in the sediment
components.
The boundary between Units I and II is marked by a sharp
change in lithology from nannofossil ooze–dominated sediments to
silt and clay–dominated sediments.
Hole U1505D
The vessel was offset 20 m south, and the bit was spaced out to
2911.6 m. APC coring in Hole U1505D started at 2200 h on 2 June
2017. Seafloor was calculated at 2917.5 mbsl based on recovery
from Core 1H. The hole was cored to a total depth of 184.5 m using
only the APC system. The bit was then recovered to the surface,
clearing the seafloor at 1800 h and the rotary table at 2310 h on 2
June. The beacon was recovered while raising the pipe and was on
deck at 1953 h. The thrusters were raised, and the rig floor was secured for transit. The vessel was underway to return to Site U1504
at 0048 h on 3 June, ending Hole U1505D and Site U1505. Our plan
was to use the time remaining on the expedition to drill a second
hole to basement at Site U1504.
Overall, 20 APC cores were taken in Hole U1505D over a 184.5
m interval, with 191.43 m recovered (104%). Nonmagnetic core barrels were used for all cores, and all cores were oriented using the
Icefield MI-5 core orientation tool.
Bulk mineralogy and chemistry
The bulk mineralogy results of XRD analyses are listed in Table
T2 and shown in Figure F9, which also shows the downcore variations in the relative abundance of minerals in bulk sediments at Site
U1505. Unit I sediment is composed mainly of calcite, quartz, plagioclase, halite, and pyrite, as well as K-feldspar and clay minerals,
including smectite, illite, kaolinite, and chlorite. In general, the percentages of halite and most terrigenous minerals in Unit I, including
quartz, plagioclase, K-feldspar, and clay minerals (illite, kaolinite,
and chlorite) decrease downhole, whereas calcite and pyrite increase.
Compositional analyses of the nannofossil ooze in Sections 368U1505C-56X-7 and 56X-CC (Subunit IC) were made directly on the
archive half of the core using the handheld portable X-ray fluorescence spectrometer (pXRF) (see Igneous and metamorphic petrology in the Expedition 367/368 methods chapter [Sun et al.,
2018]) to examine in detail the transition between Units I and II
(Table T3). The 16 intervals analyzed in Unit I show no variation in
composition, with CaO contents of ~30 wt%, SiO2 contents of ~20–
Lithostratigraphy
We examined the lithostratigraphy in Holes U1505A, U1505C,
and U1505D (Figure F7) and defined two lithostratigraphic units. In
Hole U1505A, the mudline core misfired (see Operations), and
therefore only a 0.33 m interval of the sediment section was recov-
IODP Proceedings
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Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
30
4H
40
5H
50
6H
60
7H
70
8H
80
9H
90
10H
100
11H
170
180
190
200
210
Depth (m)
220
230
240
250
260
270
280
290
300
310
19H
Clay
Silt
Sand
Lithology
Core image
Age
Volcanic ash
Silty clay
Foraminiferal sand
Biosiliceous clay and clay with biogenic silica
Clayey silt/Silty clay with nannofossils
21H
22H
23H
24F
25F
26F
27F
28F
29F
30F
31F
32F
33F
34F
35F
36F
37F
38F
39F
40F
41F
42F
43F
44F
45F
46F
47F
48X
49X
340
50X
350
51X
360
52X
370
53X
380
54X
390
55X
400
56X
410
57X
420
58X
430
59X
440
60X
470
Sandy silt
20H
330
460
Lith. unit
18H
320
450
IB
17H
61X
Nannofossil-rich clay
Clay-rich nannofossil ooze
(Foraminifer-rich) Nannofossil ooze
IC
II
U1505C
160
16H
late Miocene
150
14H
15H
middle Miocene
140
12H
Unit IB (27.76-273.39 m)
Light gray, gray, grayish brown, light brownish gray, light brown,
and brown nannofossil ooze with minor silty intervals.
13H
early Miocene
130
Unit IA (0.00-27.76 m)
Dark greenish gray and greenish gray biosiliceous-rich clay
with nannofossils, nannofossil-rich clay with biogenic silica, and
nannofossil-rich biosiliceous ooze with clay.
IA
U1505D
3H
Pleistocene
20
Pliocene
2H
110
Lithostratigraphic unit description
1H
10
120
Grain
size
Oligocene
0
Recovery
Core
Figure F7. Lithostratigraphic summary, Site U1505.
Unit IC (273.39-403.79 m)
Gray, greenish gray, and light brownish gray clay-rich nannofossil
ooze (with foraminifers), foraminifer-rich nannofossil ooze with
clay, and minor amounts of nannofossil-rich clay.
Unit II (403.50-480.54 m)
Dark greenish gray silty clay and clayey silt (with nannofossils).
62X
63X
64X
480
24 wt%, and lower Al2O3 (~5 wt%), Fe2O3 (<3 wt%), and MgO (<2
wt%) abundances. The ooze has Sr contents between 700 and 800
ppm and Zr contents between 50 and 60 ppm.
Depths: Hole U1505A = 0–0.33 m; Hole U1505C = 0–27.76 m;
Hole U1505D = 0–27.50 m
Age: Pleistocene
Subunit IA spans the recovered uppermost 27.76 m in Hole
U1505C and 27.50 m in Hole U1505D and is dominated by dark
greenish gray and greenish gray biosiliceous-rich clay with nannofossils, nannofossil-rich clay with biogenic silica, and nannofossilrich biosiliceous ooze with clay (Figure F8A). The abundance of bio-
Subunit IA
Intervals: 368-U1505A-1H-1, 0–33 cm;
368-U1505C-1H-1, 0 cm, to 4H-1, 56 cm;
368-U1505D-1H-1, 0 cm, to 4H-3, 150 cm
IODP Proceedings
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Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Subunit IB
Figure F8. Representative images of core sections from three subunits in
Unit I, Hole U1505C. A. Dark greenish gray biosiliceous-rich clay with nannofossils. A vague lamination is disrupted by bioturbation. B. Slight variation in
texture and color related to changes in the percentage of clay and foraminifers. Upper part is more clay rich than the lower section. C. Light brownish
gray clay-rich nannofossil ooze (with foraminifers). As for B, the variation in
color and texture in Subunit IC corresponds to variations in the lithology.
Mottled color variation is due to bioturbation. D. Nannofossil-rich clay with
nannofossils, sponge spicules, radiolarians, and terrigenous grains in Subunit IA.
Unit IA
Unit IB
Unit IC
368-U1505C-3H-2
368-U1505C-13H-7
368-U1505C-30F-2
B
A
Intervals: 368-U1505C-4H-1, 56 cm, to 38F-1, 49 cm;
368-U1505D-4H-4, 0 cm, to 20H-CC, 20 cm
Depths: Hole U1505C = 27.76–273.39 m; Hole U1505D =
27.50–184.82
Age: Pleistocene to middle Miocene
Subunit IB is 245.63 m thick and comprises light gray, gray, grayish brown, light brownish gray, light brown, and brown nannofossil
ooze with minor silty intervals (Figure F8B). The color change reflects the varying abundance of foraminifers and clay. The sediment
is well sorted and slightly consolidated. The sediment structure is
massive. The average grain size is clay, and medium sand is the maximum grain size. Boundaries are subhorizontal, horizontal, or inclined. Bioturbation is moderate to heavy. Thin, silty, fining-upward
intervals with erosive bottom contacts are common in Subunit IB
(Figure F11). One ~5 cm thick very dark greenish gray ash layer
with a dispersed top and a sharp basal contact is found in interval
368-U1505C-8H-6, 47–52 cm (Figure F10C, F10D). Pyrite patches
are common.
From Core 19H downhole, basal flow-in destroys the sediment
structures (Figure F12).
The boundary between Subunits IB and IC is defined by the first
occurrence of burrows of Zoophycos.
C
Subunit IC
Interval: 368-U1505C-38F-1, 49 cm, to 56X-CC, 37 cm
Depth: 273.39–403.79 m
Age: middle Miocene to late Oligocene
368-U1505C-1H-3, 102 cm
D
Radiolarians
Subunit IC is 130.40 m thick and composed of gray, greenish
gray, and light brownish gray clay-rich nannofossil ooze (with foraminifers), foraminifer-rich nannofossil ooze with clay, and minor
amounts of nannofossil-rich clay (Figure F8C). The sediment is well
sorted and well consolidated. The average grain size is clay, and very
fine sand is the maximum grain size.
Contacts between layers are often bioturbated or gradational,
horizontal to subhorizontal, or inclined. The bioturbation in Subunit IC sediment is heavy to complete. Greenish reduction spots are
common and are related to burrows. Burrows are often filled with
foraminifers and are dark gray in color. The trace fossil assemblage
includes Chondrites, Thalassinoides, Planolites, and Zoophycos
(Figure F13).
Compositional analyses of the ooze in Subunit IC were made directly on the archive half of the core using the handheld pXRF instrument (see Igneous and metamorphic petrology in the
Expedition 367/368 methods chapter [Sun et al., 2018]) (Table T3).
The ooze (16 analyses) in Sections 368-U1505C-56X-7 and 56X-CC
shows only minor variation in bulk composition. The major components are CaO (28–35 wt%), SiO2 (18–25 wt%), and Al2O3 (4–6
wt%). The ooze has Sr contents of 730–840 ppm.
The boundary between Subunit IC and Unit II is characterized
by a sharp change from greenish gray clay-rich nannofossil ooze to
very dark greenish gray silty clay.
Diatom
Sponge spicules
0.1 mm
Table T2. Mineral percentages, Site U1505. View table in PDF format.
Download available in CSV format.
genic silica decreases downhole. The fine-grained component comprises nannofossils, foraminifers, diatoms, sponge spicules,
radiolarians, and terrigenous grains, including clay minerals, and
rare quartz and feldspar (Figure F8D). The sediment is well sorted
and unlithified. The average grain size is clay, and very fine sand is
the maximum grain size. Bioturbation is heavy (Figure F8A).
A pinkish gray, ~6 cm thick, slightly normally graded ash layer
was found in interval 368-U1505C-3H-3, 24–32 cm (Figure F10A),
and ash pods were found at the corresponding depth in Hole
U1505D in interval U1505D-3H-5, 83–86 cm (Figure F10B).
The base of Subunit IA is marked by both a color change from
dark greenish gray to dark gray sediment in Subunit IB and by a
lithologic change that reflects an increase in the percentage of foraminifers.
IODP Proceedings
Unit II
Interval: 368-U1505C-57X-1, 0 cm, to 64X-CC, 36 cm
Depth: 403.50–480.54 m
Age: Oligocene
11
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Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Lith. unit
Figure F9. Bulk mineralogy data from shipboard XRD analysis, Hole U1505C.
Illite
(%)
Clay minerals
(%)
2 4 6 8 10 12
0
1
2
Plagioclase
(%)
Chlorite
(%)
3
4
0
2
0
0.8
0 20 40 60 80
1.6
Pyrite
(%)
Halite
(%)
0
10
8
12
20
0
30
10
20
30
0
IA
50
100
150
IB
Depth (m)
200
250
300
350
IC
400
450
II
500
0
1
2
Smectite
(%)
4
6
Kaolinite
(%)
8
10
20
30
Quartz
(%)
0
4
K-feldspar
(%)
0
20
40
Calcite
(%)
0
10
20
Glauconite
(%)
Discussion
Table T3. Bulk chemistry data obtained from shipboard handheld portable
X-ray fluorescence analysis, Site U1505. View table in PDF format. Download available in CSV format.
Depositional environment of Unit II
Unit II was most likely deposited in a moderately deep water
(upper slope) marine-depositional environment based on the high
clay content, abundance of nannofossils, and presence of glauconite.
In general, the sediment is fine grained (silty clay) and dominated by
terrigenous materials (quartz, feldspar, and clay minerals), with
lesser calcareous microfossils, including nannofossils and foraminifers, minor authigenic glauconite and calcite, and rare radiolarians.
Small shelly fragments, microfossils, and organic fragments are visible on the core surface, along with occasional macrofossils, including bivalves.
Glauconite grains are present between Sections 368-U1505C58X-4 and 62X-6. The presence of glauconite indicates that the sediment was most likely deposited at temperatures ranging from 7°C
to 15°C (Margielewski et al., 2017) in low oxygen conditions and in
shelf to lower slope environments from 20 to 700 m water depth
(e.g., Drzewiecki and Simo, 2002; Margielewski et al., 2017).
Lithology and sedimentary structures
Unit II is dominated by dark greenish gray, well-consolidated
silty clay and clayey silt (with nannofossils). The amount of nannofossils increases downhole (nannofossil-rich silty clay and clayey silt
with nannofossils) to Core 368-U1505C-62X and then decreases in
Cores 63X and 64X. The average grain size is silt and clay, and fine
to medium sand is the maximum grain size. The sediment is thinly
laminated. Bioturbation is heavy, and foraminifers and shell fragments are common (Figure F14E). Pyrite forms up to centimetersized patches, and rare concentrations of organic matter were also
observed (Figure F14C, F14D). Glauconite grains are especially
abundant in Sections 58X-4 (Figure F14A, F14B) and 59X-2.
Bulk mineralogy and chemistry
The bulk mineralogy results of XRD analyses are listed in Table
T2. Unit II sediments are composed mainly of glauconite, quartz,
plagioclase, clay minerals (including smectite, illite, and kaolinite),
and minor amounts of pyrite and calcite. Figure F9 shows the
downhole variations in the relative abundance of minerals identified
by XRD in bulk sediments at Site U1505. Compared to Unit I, Unit
II shows distinctly higher percentages of glauconite, plagioclase, kaolinite, and illite. In contrast, Unit II sediments have lower percentages of calcite, halite, K-feldspar, chlorite, and smectite.
Compositional analyses of Unit II clay were made directly on the
archive half of the core using the handheld pXRF instrument (see
Igneous and metamorphic petrology in the Expedition 367/368
methods chapter [Sun et al., 2018]) (Table T2). The clay (eight analyses) in Section 368-U1505C-57X-1 shows little variation in bulk
composition. The major components are SiO2 (~45 wt%), Al2O3
(12–16 wt%), and minor MgO (2–4 wt%) and K2O (~2 wt%). The
clay has Sr contents of ~150 ppm and Zr contents of ~80 ppm.
IODP Proceedings
40
Depositional environment of Unit I
Lithostratigraphic Unit I was deposited in a deep-marine environment. The dominant lithology is nannofossil ooze with variable
amounts of clay and foraminifers. The top of Unit I is more clay rich
and contains siliceous microfossils. Lithologic differences between
subunits likely reflect changes in the amount of terrigenous input
into a relatively open ocean setting, climate change, and changes in
oceanographic conditions. The terrigenous input may be delivered
as buoyant plumes from shallower shelf environments and rarely by
weak (distal) turbidity currents. There is little change in the composition of the terrigenous grains through Unit I, so we envisage a similar source for these grains. Thin laminae of silt, often with pyrite,
are found sparsely throughout Unit I. Some are graded, and all have
sharp bases; however, many are disrupted by bioturbation and interpreted as distal turbidites.
12
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Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F10. A. Pinkish gray ash layer. B. Transparent glass shards dispersed in
nannofossil-rich clay. C. Thin black ash layer and dispersed ash. D. Glass
shards with clay minerals in the black ash shown in C.
368-U1505D-3H-5, 85 cm
B
A
Transparent glass shards
368-U1505C-15H-4, 68-80 cm
368-U1505C-17H-2, 64-80 cm
A
B
Fining upward
368-U1505C-3H-3, 21-32 cm
Figure F11. A. Fining-upward interval with foraminiferal silty sand grading
upward to nannofossil-rich silty clay and then to nannofossil ooze with foraminifers. B. Two fining-upward intervals with nannofossil-rich silty clay grading upward into nannofossil ooze with clay. C. Fining-upward interval with
pyrite-rich silty sand grading upward into clay-rich nannofossil ooze. The
interval has been disrupted by bioturbation. Note the green reduced sediment in the silty sand interval and green reduction spots in the clay-rich
nannofossil ooze. D. Detail of foraminiferal silty sand shown in A. E. Detail of
silty sand shown in C.
Pinkish gray
ash layer
368-U1505C-8H-6, 44-54 cm
C
Fining upward
Fining upward
1 mm
368-U1505C-8H-6, 52 cm
D
Erosive base
Transparent
glass shards
368-U1505C-22H-1, 42-57 cm
Dispersed ash
368-U1505C-15H-4, 75 cm
C
Greenish
reduction
spots
Thin ash layer
1 mm
D
Volcanic ash
mixed with clay
1 mm
Preliminary correlation between Units I and II at Sites U1501,
U1504, and U1505
Site U1501 is located 50.28 km west of Site U1504 on the OMH.
Site U1505 is in the vicinity of Site U1501 (10.46 km east). Today’s
water depths are very similar at Sites U1501, U1504, and U1505
(2857, 2816, and 2917 mbsl, respectively). The recovered Pleistocene to early Miocene/Oligocene sediment successions can be correlated based on their major lithologies and the age of deposition.
We suggest a correlation between Pleistocene Subunit IA (Site
U1505), Pleistocene Subunit IA (Site U1504), and Pleistocene to
Pliocene Subunits IA and IB (Site U1501) because all are dominated
by dark greenish gray nannofossil-rich clay and clay-rich nannofossil-ooze with siliceous microfossils. At Site U1504, there seems to
be a hiatus below Subunit IA (see Biostratigraphy). Between Sites
U1504 and U1501, middle Miocene Subunit IB (Site U1504) correlates well with late to middle Miocene Subunit IC (Site U1501).
These subunits are both composed of greenish gray and light
brownish gray nannofossil ooze with clay- and foraminifer-rich intervals. Middle Miocene Subunit IC (Site U1504) can be correlated
with middle Miocene to Oligocene Subunits ID and IE (Site U1501).
These subunits are characterized by greenish gray and gray nannofossil ooze with clay.
Despite being close to Site U1501, the lack of distinct boundaries in the lithology at Site U1505 makes correlation between these
sites difficult. Pleistocene to late Oligocene Subunits IB and IC (Site
IODP Proceedings
Fining upward
368-U1505C-22H-1, 54 cm
E
1 mm
U1505) correlate in time to Subunits IC–IF at Site U1501 and Subunit IB and Unit II at Site U1504. In addition, although there is a
change from brownish to grayish layers at Site U1505, as was observed at Sites U1501 and U1504, the color changes are more subtle
and without clear boundaries, making correlation difficult. Therefore, a more detailed correlation of the post-Oligocene sediments
between the three sites will require postexpedition research.
Unit II at Site U1505 correlates well with Unit II at Site U1501.
There is an unconformity at the boundary between Unit I and Unit
II at Site U1501 and a sharp lithologic boundary between the two
units at Site U1505. The carbonate-to-clay ratio abruptly changes at
this boundary at both sites, and Unit I has more abundant calcareous microfossils than Unit II. The sedimentation rate is very low below the Unit II/I boundary at both sites (see Biostratigraphy).
13
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Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F12. A, B. Destruction of sedimentary features caused by drilling disturbance (basal flow-in) that affected Cores 368-U1505C-19H through 47F.
368-U1505C-19H-6
A
Figure F13. Typical ichnospecies in Subunit IC. A. Large inclined burrow with
uneven walls. B. Chondrites (Ch), Planolites (Pl), and Zoophycos (Zo). Note the
foraminifers on the core surface. C. Combination of horizontal, vertical, and
inclined burrows. D. Inclined Zoophycos burrow.
368-U1505C-31F-4
B
368-U1505C-54X-3, 129-142 cm
368-U1505C-49X-6, 13-20 cm
B
A
Ch
Pl
368-U1505C-50X-5, 121-128 cm
C
Zo
Various burrows in clay-rich
nannofossil ooze of Unit IC
368-U1505C-54X-3, 97-102 cm
Basal flow-in
D
Lithostratigraphic Unit II structures
Lithostratigraphic Unit II is characterized by subhorizontal to
gently dipping bedding as shallow as 10°. Similar to Site U1501,
some minor deformation structures are heterogeneously distributed within Unit II. In Core 368-U1505C-60X (Figure F15), millimeter-scale normal faults and joints show comparable geometries
to those described in Structural geology in the Site U1501 chapter
(Larsen et al., 2018a). In most cases, these deformation structures
are overprinted by drilling disturbance, making their recognition
difficult.
Structural geology
Site U1505 is located on the OMH at a water depth of 2917 m
roughly 10 km from Site U1501. The sedimentary and structural record at these two sites is very similar.
Biostratigraphy
Lithostratigraphic Unit I structures
All core catcher samples from Holes U1505A, U1505B, and
U1505C were analyzed for calcareous nannofossils, planktonic foraminifers, and diatoms. Additional samples were taken from intervals within the working-half cores when necessary to refine the
ages. Preservation of calcareous microfossils is good in Cores 368U1505C-1H through 48X and moderate to poor in Cores 49X
Lithostratigraphic Unit I, which consists of nannofossil oozes,
shows predominantly horizontal to subhorizontal bedding that in
most cases is erased due to moderate to strong bioturbation and
drilling disturbance. Unit I is devoid of any visible structures related
to tectonic deformation.
IODP Proceedings
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Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F14. Special features in Unit II. A. Thick lamination rich in glauconite
grains interbedded with dark greenish gray silty clay with disseminated
glauconite. B. Glauconite grains in silty clay. C. Diagenetic pyrite grains possibly replacing a burrow fill and lamination in heavily bioturbated nannofossil-rich silty clay. D. Organic matter in nannofossil-rich silty clay. E. Bivalve
macrofossil in nannofossil-rich silty clay. Note the small shelly fragments on
the core surface.
Figure F15. Deformation structures made of en echelon millimeter-scale
normal faults and fractures, Unit II. Structures resemble those observed in
Subunit IIA at Site U1501 (see Figure F27 in the Site U1501 chapter [Larsen et
al., 2018a]).
368-U1505C-60X-3, 136-143 cm
368-U1505C-58X-4, 123 cm
368-U1505C-58X-4, 118-126 cm
B
A
Glauconite
Coarse glauconite
1 mm
368-U1505C-62X-1, 107-115 cm
C
Calcareous nannofossils
368-U1505C-62X-6, 73-78 cm
Core catchers from Holes U1505A, U1505B, and U1505C were
examined (Table T6). Calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy for
Site U1505 was based mainly on the analysis of all core catcher samples from Hole U1505C, and a number of samples from intervals
within cores were analyzed to better constrain the biostratigraphic
events.
Nannofossils are abundant to common in most samples from
Hole U1505C with the exception of those from the upper part of
Core 57X. They are barren in Samples 57X-1, 0–1 cm, and 57X-1,
24–25 cm, rare in Sample 57X-1, 144–145 cm, and resume common
to abundant occurrences below Sample 57X-6, 1–2 cm. These occurrences indicate a significant change in nannofossil abundance
between Samples 57X-1, 144–145 cm, and 57X-6, 1–2 cm.
Nannofossil preservation is good in most samples from Hole
U1505C with the exception of Samples 52X-CC to 60X-CC. In this
interval, discoasterids and Sphenolithus show slight to heavy overgrowth.
Twenty-seven nannofossil biostratigraphic datums were recognized in the Oligocene through Pleistocene sediment sequence (Table T4). The oldest nannofossil event identified at Site U1505 is the
last appearance datum (LAD) of Reticulofenestra umbilicus, which
occurs at 430.26 m in Hole U1505C and indicates an age older than
32.02 Ma.
D
Organic matter
Pyrite
368-U1505C-62X-6, 19-22 cm
E
Bivalve
through 64X. Planktonic foraminifers are abundant or common in
Cores 1H through 56X and 59X through 62X and few or rare in
Cores 57X, 58X, 63X, and 64X. Calcareous nannofossils are generally abundant to common in most samples from Hole U1505C, except in the upper part of Core 57X, where they are rare to absent.
Forty-five biostratigraphic datums identified in Hole U1505C
suggest a continuous succession of early Oligocene to Holocene age
(Tables T4, T5; Figure F16). The Pleistocene/Pliocene boundary
was placed within Core 7H, the Pliocene/Miocene boundary between Cores 11H and 13H, and the Miocene/Oligocene boundary
between Cores 54X and 55X. Sedimentation rates vary from ~7
mm/ky in the Oligocene to ~15 mm/ky during the Miocene–Pliocene and ~24 mm/ky during the Pleistocene.
Relatively lower planktonic foraminifer content below Core 57X
indicates a shoaling marine environment during the early Oligocene, whereas much higher abundances of planktonic foraminifers
above Core 56X suggest a deep-water environment since the late
Oligocene.
IODP Proceedings
Pleistocene
The top of Hole U1505C (Samples 1H-CC to 2H-CC; 17.74 m) is
dated as late Pleistocene based on the presence of Emiliania huxleyi
(marker species for Zone NN21). The LAD of Pseudoemiliania lacunosa in Sample 4H-CC (37.17 m) defines the top of Zone NN19.
Zone NN19 is further divided by two nannofossil events, the first
appearance datum (FAD) of Gephyrocapsa spp. >4 μm reentrance in
Sample 5H-CC (46.51 m) and the LAD of Calcidiscus macintyrei in
Sample 6H-CC (56.23 m).
Pliocene
Pliocene nannofossil Zones NN16, NN15, and NN12 were recognized in Hole U1505C. Two events occur in the lower part of
Zone NN16: the LAD of Discoaster tamalis (2.8 Ma) in Sample 7HCC (65.70 m) and the LAD of Sphenolithus spp. (3.54 Ma) in Sample
8H-CC (74.95 m). The LAD of Reticulofenestra pseudoumbilicus
(3.70 Ma) in Sample 9H-CC (84.18 m) defines the top of Zone
15
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Table T4. Calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphic events recognized at Site U1505. T = top/last appearance datum, B = bottom/first appearance datum.
Download available in CSV format.
Top
Epoch
Biozone
(Martini, 1971)
NN21
Pleistocene
NN19
NN16
Pliocene
Miocene
late
middle
early
NN15
NN12
NN11
NN11
NN11
NN10
NN9
NN9
NN8
NN6
NN6
NN6
NN5
NN4
NN2
NP25
Oligocene
NP24
NP22
Calcareous nannofossil
event
B Emiliania huxleyi
T Pseudoemiliania lacunosa
B Gephyrocapsa spp. >4 μm reentrance
T Calcidiscus macintyrei
T Discoaster tamalis
T Sphenolithus spp.
T Reticulofenestra pseudoumbilicus
T Ceratolithus acutus
T Nicklithus amplificus
B Nicklithus amplificus
B Discoaster berggrenii
T Discoaster bollii
T Discoaster hamatus
B Discoaster hamatus
B Catinaster coalithus
T Cyclicargolithus floridanus
T Coronocyclus nitescens
B Reticulofenestra pseudoumbilicus
T Sphenolithus heteromorphus
T Helicosphaera ampliaperta
T Triquetrorhabdulus carinatus
B Helicosphaera ampliaperta
B Sphenolithus disbelemnos
T Reticulofenestra bisecta >10 μm
T Sphenolithus ciperoensis
T Sphenolithus predistentus
T Reticulofenestra umbilicus
Bottom
Age model
Depth
Core, section, Depth
Core, section CSF-A (m) interval (cm) CSF-A (m)
Depth
(m)
Age
(Ma)
368-U1505C2H-CC
3H-CC
5H-CC
5H-CC
6H-CC
7H-CC
8H-CC
10H-CC
12H-CC
14H-CC
16H-CC
17H-CC
18H-CC
20H-CC
21H-CC
22H-CC
24F-CC
28F-CC
28F-CC
34F-CC
46F-CC
48X-CC
53X-CC
54X-CC
55X-CC
56X-CC
58X-CC
21.89
31.61
51.37
51.37
60.97
70.33
79.57
98.22
117.22
136.78
155.79
165.48
175.02
192.90
198.30
203.56
214.55
233.31
233.31
261.50
312.82
331.82
379.26
389.03
398.98
407.46
424.92
0.29
0.44
1.04
1.60
2.80
3.54
3.70
5.04
5.94
6.91
8.29
9.21
9.53
10.55
10.89
11.85
12.12
12.83
13.53
14.91
18.28
20.43
22.76
23.13
24.43
26.93
32.02
17.74
26.04
46.51
46.51
56.23
65.70
74.95
93.65
111.73
132.23
150.90
160.67
170.28
189.26
196.53
200.06
212.18
230.93
230.93
259.17
310.74
326.93
374.57
383.95
394.11
403.84
419.58
368-U1505C3H-CC
4H-CC
6H-CC
6H-CC
7H-CC
8H-CC
9H-CC
11H-CC
13H-CC
15H-CC
17H-CC
18H-CC
19H-CC
21H-CC
22H-CC
23H-CC
25F-CC
29F-CC
29F-CC
35F-CC
47F-CC
49X-CC
54X-CC
55X-CC
56X-CC
57X-6, 1–2
59X-CC
26.04
37.17
56.23
56.23
65.70
74.95
84.18
102.78
122.71
141.32
160.67
170.28
179.75
196.53
200.06
207.05
216.92
235.69
235.69
263.83
314.90
336.70
383.95
394.11
403.84
411.07
430.26
Table T5. Planktonic foraminifer events, Site U1505. T = top/last appearance datum, B = bottom/first appearance datum, Bc = bottom/first common
appear-ance datum (acme). Download available in CSV format.
Top
Epoch
Pleistocene
Pliocene
Miocene
Oligocene
Biozone
(Blow, 1969)
N22
N22
N23
N20–N21
N20–N21
N19
N17
N14
N13
N12
N8
N8
N6
N5
N4
N4
P21
P19
Calcareous nannofossil
event
T Globigerinoides ruber (pink)
Bc Globigerinoides ruber (pink)
T Globorotalia tosaensis
T Globorotalia multicamerata
T Sphaeroidinellopsis seminulina
T Globoturborotalita nepenthes
T Globoquadrina dehiscens
T Paragloborotalia mayeri
B Globoturborotalita nepenthes
T Fohsella fohsi
T Praeorbulina circularis
B Praeorbulina sicana
T Catapsydrax dissimilis
T Globoquadrina binaiensis
T Paragloborotalia kugleri
T Globigerina ciperoensis
T Paragloborotalia opima
T Turborotalia ampliapertura
Age model
Depth
CSF-A (m)
Core,
section
Depth
CSF-A (m)
Depth
(m)
Age
(Ma)
368-U1505C1H-CC
3H-CC
4H-CC
6H-CC
7H-CC
9H-CC
17H-CC
20H-CC
25H-CC
25H-CC
33F-CC
44F-CC
47F-CC
49F-CC
50F-CC
53X-CC
56X-CC
58X-CC
8.23
26.04
37.17
56.23
65.70
84.18
160.67
189.26
216.92
216.92
254.46
303.21
314.90
336.70
346.12
374.57
403.84
419.58
368-U1505C2H-CC
4H-CC
5H-CC
7H-CC
8H-CC
10H-CC
18H-CC
21H-CC
26H-CC
26H-CC
34F-CC
45R-CC
48F-CC
49F-CC
51F-CC
54X-CC
57X-CC
59X-CC
17.74
37.17
46.51
65.70
74.95
93.21
170.28
196.53
221.54
221.54
259.17
307.92
326.93
336.70
355.58
383.95
413.49
430.26
12.99
31.61
41.84
60.97
70.33
88.70
165.48
192.90
219.23
219.23
256.82
305.57
320.92
336.70
350.85
379.26
408.67
424.92
0.12
0.40
0.61
2.18
3.59
4.37
5.92
10.46
11.63
11.79
14.89
16.38
17.54
19.09
21.12
22.90
26.93
30.28
NN15. The LAD of Ceratolithus acutus (5.04 Ma) in Sample 11HCC (102.78 m) defines the top of Zone NN12. The Pliocene/Miocene boundary in Hole U1505C was placed between Samples 11HCC (102.78 m) and 13H-CC (122.71 m) based on the LADs of C.
acutus and Nicklithus amplificus, respectively.
IODP Proceedings
Bottom
Core,
section
Miocene
Seven events occur in the late Miocene strata of Hole U1505C.
Zone NN11 includes three events: the LAD of N. amplificus (5.94
Ma) in Sample 13H-CC (122.71 m), the FAD of N. amplificus (6.91
Ma) in Sample 14H-CC (132.23 m), and the FAD of Discoaster berg-
16
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
0
Oligocene
early
middle
late
early
late Eocene
late
early
early
middle
Lithology
Core image
Lith. unit
late
IA
Calcareous nannofossils
3H
Planktonic foraminifers
24 mm/ky
4H
40
Miocene
Pleist. Plio.
1H
2H
20
Recovery
Core
Figure F16. Age-depth model, Site U1505. Plotted event data are in Tables T4 and T5 (see Paleomagnetism).
Magnetostratigraphy datum
5H
6H
60
7H
8H
9H
U1505D
80
10H
100 11H
12H
120 13H
14H
140
15H
16H
160
180
IB
17H
18H
19H
20H
21H
200 22H
240
260
280
300
320
15 mm/ky
U1505C
Depth (m)
220
23H
24F
25F
26F
27F
28F
29F
30F
31F
32F
33F
34F
35F
36F
37F
38F
39F
40F
41F
42F
43F
44F
45F
46F
47F
48X
49X
340 50X
IC
51X
360 52X
53X
380 54X
55X
400 56X
57X
7 mm/ky
420 58X
59X
440
60X
II
61X
460
62X
63X
480
64X
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Age (Ma)
boundary in Hole U1501C was assigned between Samples 21H-CC
(196.53 m) and 23H-CC (207.05 m) based on the FAD of C. coalitus
(10.89 Ma) and the LAD of Cyclicargolithus floridanus (11.85 Ma),
respectively.
Five events are recorded in the middle Miocene strata of Hole
U1505C. The top of Zone NN6 is marked by the LAD of C. floridanus (11.85 Ma) in Sample 23H-CC (207.05 m). Two additional
events were found in Zone NN6: the LAD of Coronocyclus nitescens
(12.12 Ma) in Sample 25F-CC (216.92 m) and the FAD of R. pseudoumbilicus (12.83 Ma) in Sample 28F-CC (230.93 m). The top of
Table T6. Distribution of calcareous nannofossils, Site U1505. View table in
PDF format. Download available in CSV format.
grenii (8.29 Ma) in Sample 16H-CC (150.90 m). The LAD of Discoaster bollii (9.21 Ma) in Sample 18H-CC (170.28 m) falls within
Zone NN10. The LAD (9.53 Ma) and FAD (10.55 Ma) of Discoaster
hamatus, which occur in Samples 19H-CC (179.75 m) and 20H-CC
(189.26 m), respectively, define Zone NN9. The FAD of Catinaster
coalitus (10.89 Ma) was used to mark the base of Zone NN8, which
occurs in Sample 21H-CC (196.53 m). The late/middle Miocene
IODP Proceedings
17
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Zone NN5 is marked by the LAD of Sphenolithus heteromorphus
(13.53 Ma) in Sample 29F-CC (235.69 m). The top of Zone NN4 is
defined by the LAD of Helicosphaera ampliaperta (14.91 Ma) in
Sample 35F-CC (263.83 m). The middle/early Miocene boundary
was assigned between Samples 35F-CC (263.83 m) and 47F-CC
(314.90 m).
Three events were recognized in the early Miocene strata of
Hole U1505C. The top of Zone NN2 is marked by the LAD of Triquetrorhabdulus carinatus (18.28 Ma) in Sample 47F-CC (314.90
m). The bottom of Zone NN2 is defined by the FAD of Sphenolithus
disbelemnos (22.76 Ma), which occurs in Sample 53X-CC (374.57
m). One additional event, the FAD of H. ampliaperta (20.43 Ma)
within Zone NN2, was found in Sample 48X-CC (326.93 m). The
Miocene/Oligocene boundary was assigned between Samples 53XCC (374.57 m) and 55X-CC (394.11 m) based on the FAD of S. disbelemnos (22.76 Ma) and the LAD of Reticulofenestra bisecta >10
μm (23.13 Ma), respectively.
Table T7. Distribution of planktonic foraminifers, Site U1505. View table in
PDF format. Download available in CSV format.
obliquiloculata, and Neogloboquadrina dutertrei. The LAD of pink
G. ruber (0.12 Ma) and the FAD of pink G. ruber acme (0.40 Ma)
occur between Samples 368-U1505C-1H-CC and 2H-CC and Samples 3H-CC and 4H-CC, respectively. The LAD of Globorotalia tosaensis (0.61 Ma) is located between Samples 4H-CC and 5H-CC.
The LAD of Globorotalia multicamerata (2.18 Ma) is located between Samples 6H-CC and 7H-CC.
The Pliocene planktonic foraminiferal assemblage is characterized by the higher content of Dentoglobigerina altispira and
Sphaeroidinellopsis seminulina. The LAD of S. seminulina (3.59
Ma) is located between Samples 7H-CC and 8H-CC. The LAD of
Globoturborotalita nepenthes (4.37 Ma) is located between Samples
9H-CC and 10H-CC and defines the boundary of Zones N20 and
N19.
The late Miocene foraminiferal assemblage is dominated by D.
altispira, S. seminulina, G. menardii, Globoquadrina venezuelana,
and Globoquadrina dehiscens. The LAD of G. dehiscens (5.92 Ma) is
located between Samples 17H-CC and 18H-CC and defines the
boundary of Zones N18 and N17. The FAD of Paragloborotalia
mayeri (10.46 Ma) is located between Samples 20H-CC and 21HCC and defines the boundary of Zones N15 and N14.
The middle Miocene foraminiferal assemblage is dominated by
D. altispira, S. seminulina, G. venezuelana, G. dehiscens, and Praeorbulina spp. The FAD of G. nepenthes (11.63 Ma) and the LAD of
Fohsella fohsi (11.79 Ma) are both located between Samples 25HCC and 26H-CC and define the boundary of Zones N13 and N12
(i.e., boundary of the late/middle Miocene). The LAD of Praeorbulina circularis (14.89 Ma) is located between Samples 33F-CC
and 34F-CC.
The late Oligocene–early Miocene planktonic foraminifers are
characterized by G. dehiscens, G. venezuelana, Catapsydrax dissimilis, and P. mayeri. The FAD of Praeorbulina sicana (16.38 Ma) is
located between Samples 44F-CC and 45F-CC and marks the
boundary of Zones N8 and N7. The LAD of C. dissimilis (17.54 Ma)
is located between Samples 47F-CC and 48F-CC and indicates the
boundary of Zones N7 and N6. The LAD of Globoquadrina
binaiensis (19.09 Ma) is located between Samples 48F-CC and 49FCC. The LAD of Paragloborotalia kugleri (21.12 Ma) is located between Samples 50X-CC and 51X-CC as the boundary of Zones
N5/N4. The LAD of Globigerina ciperoensis (22.90 Ma) is located
between Samples 53X-CC and 54X-CC and represents the Miocene/Oligocene boundary.
The early Oligocene planktonic foraminifers are characterized
by Paragloborotalia nana/opima, Turborotalia ampliapertura, and
G. ciperoensis. The LAD of P. opima (26.93 Ma) is located between
Samples 56X-CC and 57-CC as the boundary of Zones P22/P21.
The LAD of T. ampliapertura (30.28 Ma) is located between Samples 58X-CC and 59X-CC as the boundary of Zones P20/P19.
The relative abundance of planktonic foraminifers decreases below Core 56X, clearly indicating a shallower water environment
during the late to early Oligocene.
Oligocene
Four events were identified in the Oligocene strata of Hole
U1505C. The top of Zone NP25 is marked by the LAD of R. bisecta
(>10 μm; 23.13 Ma) in Sample 55X-CC (394.11 m). The LAD of
Sphenolithus ciperoensis (24.43 Ma) within Zone NP25 occurs in
Sample 56X-CC (403.84 m). The top of Zone NP24 was recognized
by the LAD of Sphenolithus predistentus (26.93 Ma) in Sample 57X6, 1–2 cm (411.07 m). The top of Zone NP22 is marked by the LAD
of R. umbilicus (32.02 Ma) in Sample 59X-CC (430.26 m).
Nannofossil assemblages in Samples 59X-CC through 64X-CC
are characterized by relatively abundant Braarudosphaera bigelowii,
Helicosphaera bramlettei, Helicosphaera compacta, and Pontosphaera spp. In particular, a significant portion of the nannofossil assemblage is composed of some late Eocene or older species such as
Pontosphaera exilis, Pontosphaera pectinata, Pontosphaera pulchripora, Reticulofenestra erbae, Reticulofenestra cf. reticulata, Reticulofenestra isabellae, and Reticulofenestra westerholdii, suggesting
that the age of the bottom of Hole U1505C is possibly the late Eocene. This evaluation warrants quantitative study during postcruise
research because the definition of the late Eocene nannofossil zonation is based on their changes in abundance.
Planktonic foraminifers
All core catcher samples and several additional samples from
the split cores from Holes U1505A, U1505B, and U1505C were processed for planktonic foraminiferal analyses (Tables T7). Planktonic
foraminifers are well preserved and abundant in Cores 368U1505C-1H through 48X and moderately preserved and few in
Cores 49X through 64X, except for the poorly preserved and rare
condition in Cores 57X to 58X.
Only mudline cores were recovered from Holes U1505A and
U1505B. No pink Globigerinoides ruber specimens were found in
Samples 368-U1505A-1H-CC and 368-U1505B-1H-CC. Compared
to the planktonic foraminiferal occurrence in Hole U1505C, the
bottom age of Holes U1505A and U1505B might be younger than
0.12 Ma.
Eighteen planktonic foraminiferal datums were recognized in
Hole U1505C, spanning from the early Oligocene (>32.03 Ma) to
the late Pleistocene (Table T5). The planktonic foraminiferal biostratigraphy for Hole U1505C was established by these events and
the planktonic foraminiferal assemblages at successive depth intervals.
The Pleistocene planktonic foraminifers are composed of G. ruber, Globigerinoides sacculifer, Globorotalia menardii, Pulleniatina
IODP Proceedings
Diatoms
The core catcher samples from Hole U1505C were processed
into smear and strewn slides for diatom analysis. A total of 28 additional toothpick samples were taken from selected intervals of the
working-half cores for better resolution. Samples from the mudline
to Sample 3H-CC are composed of between 1% and 50% diatoms
18
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Table T8. Distribution of diatoms, Site U1505. View table in PDF format. Download available in CSV format.
Table T9. Diatom events, Site U1505. T = top/last appearance datum. Download available in CSV format.
Top
Epoch
Pleistocene
Biozone
(Scherer et al., 2007)
Fragilariopsis doliolus
Diatom event
Core, section,
interval (cm)
T Fragilariopsis reinholdii
Age model
Core, section, Depth
interval (cm) CSF-A (m)
Depth
(m)
368-U1505C3H-3, 31
20.84
20.84
Age range
(Ma)
<0.62
Most of the 55 discrete samples investigated show very soft
magnetic behavior characterized by loss of more than 60% of NRM
below 15 mT. This very low coercivity (soft behavior) is the reason
for the strong vertical drilling overprint (average inclination ≈ 81°)
that is particularly visible in the APC cores. The drilling overprint is
easily removed by demagnetization to 10–15 mT (Figure F17). The
soft behavior shows that magnetic remanence is dominated by
titanomagnetite or magnetite. The contribution of greigite to the
magnetic assemblages is visible in a few discrete specimens between
Cores 368-U1505C-11H and 17H through a minute increase in
magnetization above 70 mT. The lower part of the hole (Cores 48X
through 64X) is characterized by severe drilling disturbance, resulting in destruction of the NRM vector, which is visible in the scatter
of inclinations (Figure F18). The drilling overprint affects discrete
samples (yellow squares in Figure F19) far less than core sections
(blue crosses).
with poor preservation (Table T8). The rest of the samples, with the
exception of Samples 63X-CC and 64X-CC, were barren of diatoms.
Samples 1H-CC, 2H-CC, and 3H-CC contain a typical late
Pleistocene tropical–subtropical diatom assemblage such as Fragilariopsis doliolus and Nitzschia interruptestriata (Table T9). Fragilariopsis reinholdii (LAD = 0.62 Ma) was not observed in Sample
4R-CC, suggesting an age younger than 0.62 Ma.
Smear slides from Samples 63X-CC and 64X-CC are devoid of
diatoms, but the washed residues for foraminiferal analysis contain
a few specimens of large (~250 μm) heavily recrystallized diatoms
that are similar to Arachnoidiscus in appearance.
Paleomagnetism
Shipboard measurements
Shipboard paleomagnetic investigations on Hole U1505C cores
combined two complementary approaches (see Paleomagnetism in
the Expedition 367/368 methods chapter [Sun et al., 2018]):
(1) measurement of archive-half sections on the pass-through 2G
Enterprises SRM at 2.5 cm spacing and (2) measurement and AF demagnetization of 55 oriented discrete samples on the spinner
magnetometer (AGICO JR-6A). Additionally, the anisotropy of
magnetic susceptibility (AMS) was measured on discrete samples
with the KLY 4 Kappabridge.
Except for Sections 368-U1505C-1H-1 through 3H-1, which
were in-line AF demagnetized in 3 steps (5, 10, and 15 mT), only
NRM was measured with the SRM for Hole U1505C. This decision
was made after a comparison of magnetization intensities between
discrete samples and sections led us to suspect that the SRM was
not properly calibrated (geometrically) for core sections. U-channel
samples will be collected on shore to analyze and demagnetize this
core.
Scalar data from discrete samples from AF demagnetization up
to 120 mT were used to assess the nature of the magnetic assemblage and the directional and intensity data. Directional data were
analyzed using Zijderveld diagrams (Zijderveld, 1967), and the
characteristic remanent magnetization (ChRM) direction(s) were
calculated by principal component analysis (PCA) (Kirschvink,
1980) using PuffinPlot (version 1.03, April 23, 2015) (Lurcock and
Wilson, 2012).
Magnetostratigraphy
Inclination, intensity, and polarity for Hole U1505C are reported
in Figure F19. We constructed the magnetostratigraphy based on
the polarity assigned to the archive-half cores and corroborated by
directions obtained from oriented discrete samples. A succession of
two normal and three reversed polarities was recognized. We tentatively correlated the magnetostratigraphic data of Site U1505C with
the standard timescale (Ogg et al., 2016) according to biostratigraphy age constraints as reported in Figure F16. The normal polarity Zone n1 is interpreted as the Brunhes Chron (C1n), with the
lower boundary at 37.415 m with an age of 0.781 Ma. The lower
boundary (57.365 m) of reversed Polarity r1 is the base of Subchron
C1r.3r with an age of 1.778 Ma.
Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility
The 55 discrete samples have magnetic susceptibility (κ) values
ranging from ≈ 60 × 10−6 to 628 × 10−6 SI (Figure F20). These low κ
values combined with the low NRM suggest that both paramagnetic
silicates (e.g., clays and chlorite) and minor ferromagnetic phases
(e.g., titanomagnetite or magnetite) control the magnetic susceptibility. The degree of magnetic anisotropy (P′) is moderate (~1.025),
whereas the AMS fabric has a strongly oblate fabric, as shown by
shape parameter (T), most likely of depositional origin. The Fisher
distribution of AMS principal axes also suggests an oblate fabric
with a nearly horizontal planar fabric. These sedimentary fabrics
are consistent with deposition in a calm, pelagic environment with
very limited traction on sedimentary particles.
Demagnetization behavior and implications
for magnetic assemblages
Units: lithostratigraphic Units I and II
Depth: 0.00–480.54 m
Sections 368-U1505C-1H-1 through 64X-CC
IODP Proceedings
Bottom
Depth
CSF-A (m)
19
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F17. AF demagnetization plots of (A) archive-half section and (B–D) discrete samples, Hole U1505C sedimentary rocks. Zijderveld plots: solid squares =
declination, open squares = inclination. Stereographic plots: solid squares = positive (down) inclination, open squares = negative (up) inclination. Calculated
ChRM (blue line; red squares = measurements used in calculation) using PCA is also shown. A. Removal of drilling overprint in first step (5 mT). B. Soft demagnetization behavior up to 10 mT associated with removal of drilling overprint, followed by gradual demagnetization from 10 to 60 mT, characteristic of singledomain and pseudosingle-domain magnetite, and negative inclination of sample. C. Soft demagnetization behavior. D. Soft demagnetization behavior. MAD =
maximum angular deviation.
B
368-U1505C-1H-1A, 75 cm, 0.75 m
Magnetization (A/m × 10 -2)
Magnetization (A/m × 10 -2)
A
5
N,U
4
W,S
3
2
1
0
3.0
1.0
PCA Dec 182.20°
Inc 41.83°
MAD 0.71°
0
5
10
15
3-axis AF strength (mT)
368-U1505C-6H-4W, 13-15 cm, 50.83 m
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
0°
N,U
NRM 10
W,S
0
50
100
150
3-axis AF strength (mT)
0°
NRM
270°
1.0
PCA Dec 302.46°
Inc -18.69°
MAD 4.38°
NRM
Vertical
Horizontal
90°
2.0
270°
90°
NRM
Vertical
Horizontal
NRM
5.0
180°
N,U
10
4
NRM
3
2
W,S
1
0
1
1
50
100
150
3-axis AF strength (mT)
NRM
IODP Proceedings
N,U
0.5
1.5
PCA Dec 264.54°
Inc 74.44°
MAD 5.35°
1.0
0.5
0
W,S
0.5
0
50
100
150
3-axis AF strength (mT)
0.5
NRM
0°
90°
270°
90°
NRM
Vertical
Horizontal
180°
368-U1505C-36F-2W, 60-62 cm, 265.6 m
PCA Dec 327.32°
Inc 65.16°
MAD 2.54°
0°
270°
D
368-U1505C-7H-6W, 70-72 cm, 63.90 m
5
0
6.0
180°
Magnetization (A/m × 10 -3)
Magnetization (A/m × 10 -2)
C
NRM
NRM
Vertical
Horizontal
NRM
5
180°
20
1.5
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F18. Magnetization intensity vs. inclination showing effect of steep drilling overprint and core disturbance in Cores 368-U1505C-48X through 64X. Red
dashed line = mean inclination for Cores 48X through 64X, black dashed line = mean inclination for Cores 1H through 47F.
Inclination (°)
-90
-60
-30
0
30
60
90
10
368-U1505C-1H to 47F, n = 12256
368-U1505C-48X to 64X, n = 6139
1
Intensity (A/m)
0.1
0.01
0.001
0.0001
0.000001
81.54°
54.45°
0.00001
0.0000001
Depth (m)
250
300
350
400
450
NRM
Lith. unit
Age
Geomagnetic
polarity
(GPTS2016)
n1
C1
1
r1
C2
2
n2
C2A
Pliocene
Pleistocene
0
IA
3
4
C3
5
6
C3A
C3B
IB
C4
C4A
C5
C5A
r2
r3
9
10
11
12
13
C5AB
14
C5AD
15
C5B
16
C5C
17
C6
18
19
20
C6A
C6AA
C6B
C6C
II
8
C5AB
C5E
IC
7
C5AA
C5D
15 mT AFD
Expected inclination
Normal polarity
IODP Proceedings
Magnetic
30 60 90 polarity
Age (Ma)
200
Inclination (°)
-90 -60 -30 0
late Miocene
150
0.1
middle Miocene
100
0.001
early Miocene
50
1H
2H
3H
4H
5H
6H
7H
8H
9H
10H
11H
12H
13H
14H
15H
16H
17H
18H
19H
20H
21H
22H
23H
24F
25F
26F
27F
28F
29F
30F
31F
32F
33F
34F
35F
36F
37F
38F
40F
41F
42F
43F
44F
45F
46F
47F
48X
49X
50X
51X
52X
53X
54X
55X
56X
57X
58X
59X
60X
61X
62X
63X
64X
Intensity (A/m)
1E-5
21
22
23
Oligocene
0
Recovery
Core
Figure F19. Magnetic measurements, Hole U1505C. Inclination was used to determine polarity. AFD = AF demagnetization. Magnetostratigraphic features are
referred to as n1, etc., in a sequential manner for convenience and have no bearing on chrons. Discrete samples are yellow and green. GPTS2016 = geomagnetic polarity timescale of Ogg et al. (2016).
AFD ChRM
Reversed polarity
21
NRM of discrete samples
Unidentified
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F20. AMS data, Hole U1505C. A. Stereonet of AMS principal directions (lower hemisphere, equal-area projection). K1 = maximum axis, K2 = intermediate
axis; K3 = minimum axis. Confidence ellipses at 95% level (same color convention) show dominantly planar and subhorizontal fabric (oblate), consistent with
sedimentary fabric acquired in a calm pelagic environment. Tensorial means are shown with larger symbols of same color. B. Degree of magnetic anisotropy
(P′) vs. magnetic susceptibility (Km). C. Shape parameter (T) vs. P′ showing dominantly oblate symmetry of sedimentary fabric.
B
A
Geographic
coordinate
system
N
1.114
P'
Equal-area
projection
N = 55
1.000
5.92E-05
270°
90°
6.28E-04
Km (SI)
1
C
T
Oblate
K1
Prolate
K2
K3
180°
-1
1.00
Geochemistry
1.04
1.06
P'
1.08
1.10
Table T10. Carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur, Hole U1505C. View table in PDF
format. Download available in CSV format.
Hydrocarbon gases were detected in deeper sediments only at
Site U1505 and not at shallow depths. Thus, the base of the hole has
methane distributions similar to those at Site U1499 (which has
methane at depth), whereas the uppermost section is similar to Site
U1501, which is barren of methane. Except for the shallowest 30 m
of sediment, TOC, TN, and TS contents were mostly low in shallower lithostratigraphic Unit I, but TS and TOC were slightly higher
in Unit II. Thus, in terms of solid organic geochemistry, Sites U1505
and U1501 are similar. Instances of high carbonate content are associated with bioclastic oozes. Interstitial water chemistry has two important features. The upper part exhibits patterns similar to those at
Site U1501 in several respects (e.g., inhibited sulfate reduction), and
there is evidence of freshwater input in deeper sediments (based on
low chlorine, bromide, and salinity). Inductively coupled plasma–
atomic emission spectroscopy analysis was not performed on samples collected at Site U1505.
tive to the units beneath. Sulfur content, although low in this unit, is
higher than in the subunits immediately beneath it (Figure F21).
Lithostratigraphic Subunits IB and IC have generally low TOC (<1
wt%) and low TS, which is also the case for Site U1501, where organic carbon is also least well preserved in these units.
Lithostratigraphic Unit II
Lithostratigraphic Unit II has high sulfur and low carbonate
content, and relative to Subunits IB and IC, it has significant organic
carbon content (typically 0.5 wt%). The TOC/TN ratio for the interval is low, indicating high-nitrogen material, which would classically
be interpreted as well-preserved organic matter of aquatic origin
(Hedges et al., 1988).
High carbonate contents were found in bioclast-rich Subunits IB
and IC. On a crossplot, Subunit IA and Unit II both have distinctively low carbonate contents and low TOC/TN ratios (Figure F22),
indicating a high proportion of aquatic organic matter, and Subunits
IB and IC appear to have organic matter that has been more heavily
degraded or is terrestrial in origin (Hedges et al., 1988). On a carbon-sulfur crossplot, the distinctively high sulfur content in Unit II
is a little unusual because it does not have much organic matter. The
unit appears to have a high abundance of reduced sulfur, whereas
Subunit IA has low sulfide content, given that it is relatively organic
carbon–rich marine mud (Berner and Raiswell, 1984).
Headspace gas
Headspace gas samples were taken at a frequency of one sample
per core or per 10 m of drilling advance for routine safety monitoring. As at Site U1501, methane was not abundant in shallow sediments at Site U1505 (uppermost 50 m), although it was detected
deeper in the hole at ~150 and ~ 400 m. Concentrations range from
70 to 3899 ppmv from 380 to 438 m, with a single instance of ethane
found at this depth. A small concentration of methane was also detected at 150 m.
Raman and surface-enhanced Raman
spectroscopy
Bulk sediment geochemistry
Solid geochemistry parameters are listed in Table T10.
Surface-enhanced Raman measurements were performed on
shallow core and mudline samples from Holes U1505A–U1505D.
Concentrations are reported as nanograms asphaltene per gram of
sediment in Figure F23.
Lithostratigraphic Unit I
As seen at Site U1501, the uppermost black mud (lithostratigraphic Subunit IA) has relatively high TOC and TN contents rela-
IODP Proceedings
1.02
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Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F21. Methane, TOC/TN ratio and carbonate, and TOC and TS, Site U1505.
Lithology
Lith. unit
U1505
Methane
(ppmv)
1
TOC/TN
Carbonate (wt%)
100
20
0
40
TOC
TS
(wt%)
60
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
0
100
I
Depth (m)
200
300
400
II
500
Mixed sand,
silt, and mud
Mud
Figure F22. Crossplot of organic geochemical parameters, Site U1505. Solid circles = lithostratigraphic Subunit IA, open squares = Subunit IB, crosses = Subunit
IC, open circles = Unit II.
Carbonate (wt%)
0
20
40
TOC (wt%)
60
0.0
2.0
30
1.5
TS (wt%)
40
TOC/TN
1.0
1.5
2.5
50
20
1.0
10
0.5
0
0.0
Interstitial water chemistry
terstitial water geochemical parameters are presented in Table T11
and Figure F24.
In general, the geochemical parameters of interstitial water at
Site U1505 are similar to those at Site U1501. We also defined three
geochemical interstitial water zones at Site U1505 based on the
variations of geochemical parameters (listed in Table T11). Interstitial water Zone 1 (interval 368-U1505C-1H-2, 0–5 cm, to 3H-4, 0–
Shipboard analyses were performed on interstitial water
squeezed from 5–20 cm long whole-round sediment samples from
Hole U1505C. From Cores 1H through 46F, 5–15 cm long intervals
were squeezed for interstitial water and yielded >30 mL per sample.
From Cores 46F through 64X, 20 cm long whole-round sediment
cores were squeezed and yielded 5–20 mL of interstitial water. InIODP Proceedings
0.5
23
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Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F23. Asphaltene concentrations per gram of sediment for mudline cores, Holes U1505A–U1505D.
ng asphaltene/g sediment
60000
40000
20000
Q75
Median
Q25
Q75
Median
Q25
0
Mudlines U1505A to U1505D
Cores U1505A-1H to U1505D-1H
Table T11. Interstitial water analyses, Hole U1505C. View table in PDF format. Download available in CSV format.
Figure F24. Interstitial water alkalinity, major cations, and anions, Site U1505.
Lithology
Lith. unit
U1505
Alkalinity
(mM)
pH
2 4 6 8 7.5 7.7 7.9
Cl(mM)
520
Br (mM)
560 0.80 0.85 0.90
PO43(µM)
SO42(mM)
10
20
0
20 40
NH4 +
(µM)
500
1500 400
Na +
(mM)
450
K+
(mM)
2.5
7.5
Ca 2+
(mM)
10
Mg 2+
(mM)
20 30
20 30 40 50
0
Depth (m)
100
200
I
300
400
II
500
Mud
Mixed sand,
silt, and mud
10 cm) comprises samples obtained close to the mudline (sediment/water interface). Within this interval, the maximum values of
sulfate, alkalinity, and phosphate were observed and are likely related to degradation of organic matter. In interstitial water Zone 2
(interval 4H-4, 0–10 cm, to 56X-4, 0–20 cm), sulfate decreases and
alkalinity is buffered by high carbonate concentrations within foraminifer-rich oozes. Atypically for this marine setting (Li et al.,
IODP Proceedings
2015), in which sulfate reduction is prevalent in marine sediments,
diffusion processes dominate the sulfate profile. Decreasing K and
Mg and increasing Ca reflect the typical diffusion-formed profile of
interstitial water. In interstitial water Zone 3 (interval 57X-4, 0–20
cm, to 64X-4, 0–20 cm), sodium, chloride, and bromide concentrations are anomalously low.
24
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
within sediments). Site U1499 has an SMTZ at ~70 m that likely reflects present-day processes. Site U1505 has a possible SMTZ at
~400 m, but it is not sharply defined (e.g., sulfate does not sharply
inflect at this depth).
Both sedimentation rate and the presence of organic matter are
important for the development of an SMTZ. TOC contents are essentially comparable between the three sites, with Site U1499 perhaps having a lower TOC because of a high input of sediment
(sediment dilutes the organic carbon content). Despite the low absolute TOC, the net accumulation rate per unit time may still be
comparable for all three sites. Thus, differing supply of organic carbon is not likely to be a key factor, with differences in sedimentation
rate being the more likely differentiator between sites. High sedimentation rates promote anaerobic conditions by more rapidly
burying organic matter to depths below which oxygen can diffuse
(Demaison and Moore, 1980).
Evidence of past SMTZs can be preserved in a number of ways:
high methane concentrations may remain in hydrostatic waters and
reduced sulfur (sulfide) may mineralize in the form of sulfide minerals such as pyrite or greigite. Thus, a past SMTZ may be preserved
beneath the T60 unconformity at Site U1505 where low pore water
sulfate, high methane, and high TS are observed. Seepage from this
zone at 400 m may also thus explain the methane present at shallower depths. The three sites together form an interesting study potentially demonstrating that the T60 unconformity surface is an
important boundary affecting biogeochemical processes by controlling the flux of deeper fluids to shallower sediments.
Alkalinity varies within Hole U1505C, ranging from 1.0 to 8.3
mM (Figure F24). In interstitial water Zone 1, alkalinity increases to
a peak concentration of 7.9 mM at 15.65 m (Sample 2H-5, 0–5 cm).
The change in alkalinity is most likely caused by degradation of organic matter. In interstitial water Zone 2, alkalinity decreases to <3
mM at 90 m and remains constant until 185 m. Alkalinity increases
again to a peak concentration of 6.8 mM at 308 m and then decreases downhole to the base of interstitial water Zone 2. The pH
value decreases slowly from the seafloor to the bottom of interstitial
water Zone 2 and then increases to a maximum (pH = 7.82) at the
bottom of interstitial water Zone 3 (Sample 63X-4, 0–20 cm).
Profiles of Cl, Br, and Na are similar (Figure F24). In interstitial
water Zone 1, Cl, Br, and Na concentrations increase slightly with
depth. In interstitial water Zone 2, Cl, Br, and Na remain constant to
322 m (Sample 48X-4, 0–20 cm) with concentrations similar to seawater, and then between 322 and 400 m, Cl and Na concentrations
vary. Interstitial water Zone 3 has low Cl, Br, and Na concentrations
that decrease to a minimum in interstitial water Zone 3. A similar
phenomenon was also observed in Hole U1501C, although the
depth at which it occurs is different. In both cases, this minimum
corresponds to the stratigraphic level of the T60 seismic unconformity. This correlation is discussed in detail later.
The dissolved sulfate profile decreases from 27.1 mM at the seafloor to <2 mM at the bottom of Hole U1505C (Figure F24). In interstitial water Zone 1, sulfate concentrations decrease sharply,
most likely caused by bacterially mediated organic matter diagenesis in upper sediments. In interstitial water Zone 2, this decline
is gradual until near-minimum concentrations are observed. In interstitial water Zone 3, sulfate concentrations are low.
Dissolved NH4+ concentrations increase from 143.6 μM at 2.96
m to a maximum of 1874 μM at the bottom of Hole U1505C. In interstitial water Zone 1, a sharp increase in NH4+ was observed that
would typically be explained by degradation of organic matter releasing reduced nitrogen. In interstitial water Zones 2 to 3, continuous increases in NH4+ concentration suggest the existence of a
source of NH4+ that diffuses upward from the bottom. A maximum
dissolved phosphate concentration was observed in interstitial water Zone 1 (54.85 μM at 15.65 m). In interstitial water Zones 2–3,
phosphate concentrations are generally low (several micromolar
concentration).
The K+ and Mg2+ profiles decrease in a similar way to each other
from the surface to the bottom of the hole. The decreases of K and
Mg are possibly due to diagenetic reactions occurring in sediment,
such as clay ion exchange. Contrary to the K and Mg pore water
profiles, the Ca2+ profile increases from the surface to a maximum
concentration (33.5 mM) at the bottom of Hole U1505C. Changes
in calcium concentration are mostly caused by carbonate diagenesis
(i.e., dissolution of biogenic carbonate and recrystallization of
authigenic carbonates).
Sub-T60 unconformity halide formation
water anomaly
Important anions for understanding the formation water anomaly in chloride and bromide beneath the T60 unconformity are
shown in Figure F26. Any such explanation must take account of
the conservative nature of the halide ions—they are not generated
from diagenetic reactions typical of marine sediments. Any explanation must also allow for the linear changes in depth (reflecting
temperature) observed in the major cations such as magnesium,
calcium, and potassium.
Two possible explanations for the sub-T60 unconformity halide
anomaly are postdepositional recharge under a hydrodynamic regime or trapping of an original fresher water body depleted in these
ions. The salinities and halide concentrations observed are low for
marine water but toward the high end of brackish water. Such a water body might have been deposited with the sediment or potentially moved into the sediment very early in its history through
subtidal pumping (Shum and Sundby, 1996), albeit only during
storm events for deeper water sediments. The origin of the bromide, chloride, and sodium anomaly can best be explained by a
trapped water body depleted in these anions and subsequent alteration of calcium, magnesium, and potassium in pore waters during
diagenesis. Were the current water hydrodynamically emplaced after deposition, it would have to contain exactly the correct proportions of calcium, magnesium, and potassium to not disturb the
depth-dependent trend.
Instead, it is more feasible that subsequent diagenetic processes
such as smectite-illite transformation (Boles and Franks, 1979) or
cation exchange involving carbonate minerals, which are temperature dependent (depth dependent), has released or taken up calcium, magnesium, and potassium from pore waters and thereby
altered a trapped water body. A trapped water body would not be
Discussion
Sulfate–methane transition zones
Figure F25 illustrates geochemical parameters that help explain
the shallow biogeochemical processes occurring in SCS sediments.
The sulfate–methane transition zone (SMTZ) occurs where organic
matter degradation consumes dissolved substrates (foremost oxygen and then others such as phosphate, ammonium, etc.) and anaerobic conditions develop (Barnes and Goldberg, 1976). The SMTZ
can be defined by the depletion of sulfate within pore water and the
beginning of methanogenesis (elevated methane concentrations
IODP Proceedings
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Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F25. Comparison of SMTZs and key biogeochemical elements at Sites U1499, U1501, and U1505. T60 unconformity is a basin-wide regional marker.
SO42(mM)
TOC TS
(wt%)
0.0
1.0
2.0
0
NH4 +
(µM)
Methane
(ppmv)
20
10
1
Porosity
(%)
100
0
0
20
40
60
U1505
Depth (m)
200
Past SMTZ?
400
T60
T60
600
SO42(mM)
TOC TS
(wt%)
0.0
1.0
2.0
0
10
NH4 +
(µM)
20
Methane
(ppmv)
30
1
Porosity
(%)
100
10000
0
40
60
Sulphur
Sulfur
not
Not
measured
Measured
250
Depth (m)
20
U1499
SMTZ
SMT
SMTZ
SMT
0
500
750
T60?
1000
TOC TS
(wt%)
0.0
1.0
2.0
0
SO42(mM)
NH4 +
(µM)
10
20
Methane
(ppmv)
-0.50
-0.25
0.00
Porosity
(%)
0.25
0
0.50 0
20
40
60
U1501
Depth (m)
200
Not detected
T60
T60
400
Past
Past
SMTZ?
SMT?
600
able to acquire a new halide-anion composition but would be able to
equilibrate during diagenesis and produce the linear increase with
depth seen here in calcium, magnesium, and potassium. Such a
trapped water body might also cause a formation to be lithostati-
IODP Proceedings
cally pressured and hence undercompacted, leading to the higher
porosities observed in the sub-T60 unconformity lithologies
(Bethke, 1986).
26
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Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F26. Data illustrating sub-T60 unconformity halide interstitial water anomaly at Site U1505 and comparators at Sites U1499 and U1501.
Ca 2+
Br (mM)
Cl(mM)
520 540 560 580
0.80
0.90
Salinity
1.00 30
32
34
36
38
0
K+
(mM)
20
Mg 2+
40
0
Porosity
(%)
0
20
40
60
U1505
Depth (m)
200
T60
400
600
Ca 2+
Br (mM)
Cl(mM)
540 550 560
0.80
0.90
Salinity
1.00
30
32
34
36
38
0
K+
(mM)
20
Mg 2+
40
0
Porosity
(%)
0
20
40
60
U1499
Depth (m)
250
500
750
T60?
1000
Cl(mM)
540
560
Ca 2+
Br (mM)
580
0.80
0.90
Salinity
1.00
30
32
34
0
36
38
0
K+
(mM)
20
Mg 2+
40
Porosity
(%)
0
20
40
60
U1501
Depth (m)
200
T60
400
600
Physical properties
measurements were performed on the cores from Hole U1505D,
which is a duplicate of Hole U1505C downcore to 184 m. P-wave
velocity was also measured on working-half sections using the Pwave caliper (PWC) system. Thermal conductivity was measured
on one section, typically Section 3, for each core. Additionally, discrete samples from Hole U1505C were analyzed for bulk density,
Whole-round measurements of magnetic susceptibility, gamma
ray attenuation (GRA) bulk density, P-wave velocity (P-wave logger
[PWL]), and NGR were made on each core recovered from Holes
U1505C (0–480.2 m) and U1505D (0–184 m). Only nondestructive
IODP Proceedings
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Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F27. Physical properties, Hole U1505C. cps = counts per second.
Bulk density MAD
Bulk density GRA
(g/cm3)
Core NGR
(cps)
0
100
1
2.5
MS WRMSL
MS point
(10 -5 SI)
0
100
P-wave caliper
P-wave WRMSL
(m/s)
1000
2500
Thermal
conductivity
(W/[m·K])
Porosity MAD
(%)
30
80
0.5
2.0
PP
unit
50
100
150
U1505C
Depth (m)
200
1
250
300
350
400
2
450
500
porosity, and dry and grain density. Color reflectance, RGB color
spectra, and point magnetic susceptibility were measured on all archive-half sections from Holes U1505C and U1505D.
Because the cores recovered from Hole U1505D sampled the
same lithologic section as in the uppermost ~180 m in Hole
U1505C, the discussion here will focus on Hole U1505C. Based on
the physical property characteristics, the lithologic sequence recovered from Hole U1505C was divided into two petrophysical (PP)
units, PP Units 1 and 2, with a boundary at 403 m (Figure F27). This
boundary corresponds to the boundary between lithostratigraphic
Units I and II. The interface between these two units is marked by
an abrupt shift in physical property measurements. The entire sequence recovered from Hole U1505D was assigned to PP Unit 1
(Figure F28). Hole U150C cores show some drilling disturbance
deeper than ~250 m (see Lithostratigraphy).
by a sharp increase to ~75 counts/s at ~403 m associated with the
top of PP Unit 2. In PP Unit 2, NGR decreases to ~45 counts/s at
440 m and then increases.
P-wave velocity
In PP Unit 1, P-wave velocity values gradually increase with
depth from ~1470 m/s at the seafloor to ~1765 m/s at ~335 m, followed by an increase that reaches ~2166 m/s at ~403 m (Figure
F27). P-wave velocity values decrease sharply at the PP Unit 1/2
boundary to 1725 m/s and then remain relatively constant at ~2000
m/s from this point downhole to ~480 m.
Thermal conductivity
Thermal conductivity values show a well-defined trend in the
designated petrophysical units. PP Unit 1 has a gradual increasing
trend with depth. In this unit, thermal conductivity ranges from
0.906 to 1.684 W/(m·K) (Figure F27). The trend is interrupted with
scattered values at ~250–270 m. This scatter could be due to drilling
disturbance. PP Unit 2 shows a sudden drop in thermal conductivity
with values ranging from 1.248 to 1.314 W/(m·K). In PP Unit 2,
more measurements could not be done due to the high drilling disturbance in the cores.
Natural gamma radiation
NGR values in PP Unit 1 are represented by three major intervals (Figure F27). The upper interval from the seafloor to ~65 m
ranges from ~20 to ~45 counts/s, and NGR values peak around the
middle of this depth range. The second interval (~65–~335 m) is
also marked by initially increasing NGR between ~20 and ~55
counts/s. NGR values then gradually decrease at the bottom of this
interval to 35 counts/s at ~335 m. The lowermost interval of PP
Unit 1 displays a general increase in NGR. This interval ends with
an abrupt decrease in NGR to 35 counts/s close to 403 m, followed
IODP Proceedings
Density and porosity
In PP Unit 1 (0–403 m), bulk density increases with depth from
1.4 g/cm3 at the seafloor to ~2.1 g/cm3 at the base of the unit (Fig28
Volume 367/368
Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F28. Physical properties, Hole U1505D.
Core NGR
(cps)
10
MS WRMSL
MS point
(10 -5 SI)
Bulk density GRA
(g/cm3)
50 1.0
2.5
0
P-wave caliper
P-wave WRMSL
(m/s)
100 1400
Thermal
conductivity
(W/[m·K])
1700 0.5
2.0
PP
unit
U1505D
Depth (m)
50
1
100
150
depth (Figure F30). In PP Unit 1, both a* and b* gently increase in
the upper portion (0 to ~180 m), followed by a section with highamplitude variability between ~200 and 260 m, before they drop to
minimum and relatively constant values to the base of the record.
No significant shift in a* and b* was observed at the unit boundary.
ures F27, F29). Porosity shows an inverse trend to density and decreases from ~80% to ~35%. Grain density varies between 2.7 and
2.8 g/cm3 with no visible downcore trend (Figure F29). The interface between PP Units 1 and 2 (~403 m) is marked by an abrupt decrease in bulk density from 2.1 to 1.9 g/cm3 and dry density from 1.8
to 1.3 g/cm3. In contrast, porosity increases dramatically across this
depth interval from ~34% to ~52%. This boundary coincides with
the T60 seismic unconformity (see Correlation to seismic data)
and can also be clearly recognized in other physical property data,
including NGR, P-wave velocity, and color data (Figures F27, F29,
F30, F31). In PP Unit 2 (403–480.2 m), bulk density increases
slightly with depth from 1.86 to >1.96 g/cm3 and dry density increases from ~1.3 to ~1.5 g/cm3. Porosity decreases with depth
from 51% to 35%.
Magnetic susceptibility
Whole-round magnetic susceptibility and point magnetic susceptibility values show a good, consistent trend throughout all core
sections from Holes U1505C and U1505D (Figures F27, F28). In PP
Unit 1, the magnetic susceptibility profile can be viewed as three
windows of different trends: (1) low and constant magnetic susceptibility from 0 to 30 m with a mean value of ~20 × 10−5 SI, (2) high
and constant magnetic susceptibility from 30 to 80 m with a mean
value of ~45 × 10−5 SI, and (3) gradually decreasing magnetic susceptibility from 80 to 403 m. In PP Unit 1, the trend is frequently
interrupted by spikes downcore. Finally, PP Unit 2 is associated with
a persistently low and constant magnetic susceptibility of ~5.
Color reflectance spectrophotometry
Sediment color reflectance values are in very good agreement
between Holes U1505C and U1505D, as expected (Figure F30). L*
represents luminosity, or total reflected light, and is well correlated
to CaCO3 content in sediments (see Geochemistry). In PP Unit 1,
L* overall increases with depth from the seafloor to ~75 m; thereafter, downhole L* values fluctuate between 50 and 60 but overall remain relatively constant to ~400 m, where they drop to <40 in PP
Unit 2.
Reflectance a* and b* values indicate redness and yellowness of
sediments, respectively, and show consistent variations with core
IODP Proceedings
RGB
RGB in PP Unit 1 steadily increases with depth from the seafloor
to 70 m, reaching a maximum of 130 followed by constant values
until the bottom of PP Unit 1 (Figure F31). At 403 m, corresponding
to the boundary between PP Units 1 and 2, RGB values show a
marked decrease (from 110 to 75). Below this depth, RGB remains
relatively constant to the bottom of PP Unit 2.
29
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Z. Jian et al.
Site U1505
Figure F29. MAD bulk density, dry density, grain density, and porosity, Hole U1505C.
Bulk density MAD
Bulk density GRA
(g/cm3)
0
1
1.5
2
Grain density
(g/cm3)
Dry density
(g/cm3)
2.5 0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
2.6
Porosity
(%)
3 20
2.8
40
60
80 100
PP
unit
50
100
150
U1505C
Depth (m)
200
1
250
300
350
400
450
2
500
Figure F30. Sediment color reflectance parameters L*, a*, and b* for Holes U1505C and U1505D and CaCO3 content for Hole U1505C (see Geochemistry).
L*
0
20
40
a*
60
-5
0
5
CaCO3
(wt%)
b*
10
15
-10
0
10
20 0
20
40
60
80
PP
unit
U1505D
50
100
150
1
Depth (m)
U1505C
200
250
300
350
400
450
2
500
U1505C
U1505D
Discussion and summary
susceptibility and porosity (Figures F27, F28). In contrast, PP Unit 2
(403–480 m) is characterized by a sharp change in physical properties at its upper boundary (403 m) but a relatively constant trend
downhole within the unit.
In PP Unit 1 (0–403 m), sediments are composed of foraminiferrich nannofossil ooze with clay in the upper part, which gradually
changes to clay-rich nannofossil ooze in the lower portion of the
unit. This transition is well reflected in NGR, which increases with
depth. The higher NGR in PP Unit 2 is related to sediment that pri-
The observed physical properties allow us to characterize two
major petrophysical units at Site U1505. The sediments recovered
display a distinct color change from greenish a