Proceedings of the IODP 2006
DOI: 10.2204/iodp.proc.307.101.2006
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Expedition 307 summary

Abstract: Challenger Mound is a prominent mound structure covered with dead cold-water coral rubble on the southwest Irish continental margin and was the focus of 12 days of scientific drilling aboard the JOIDES Resolution during Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 307.Specific drilling objectives included the following:1. Establish whether the mound roots on a carbonate hardground of microbial origin and whether past geofluid migration events acted as a prime trigger for mound genesis. 2. Define the relationsh… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…It was documented that the mounds were built up as carbonate structures, capped with living deep-water corals. However, it seems that the reason why they build up where they do, may be more complex than previously suspected, even despite drilling campaigns where one of the now dead mounds was sampled by drilling (Ferdelman et al, 2006;Hovland, 2008). Therefore, much more scientific multidisciplinary work is needed to be done before we know why and how they build up (Foucher et al, 2009).…”
Section: Deep-sea Carbonate Moundsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was documented that the mounds were built up as carbonate structures, capped with living deep-water corals. However, it seems that the reason why they build up where they do, may be more complex than previously suspected, even despite drilling campaigns where one of the now dead mounds was sampled by drilling (Ferdelman et al, 2006;Hovland, 2008). Therefore, much more scientific multidisciplinary work is needed to be done before we know why and how they build up (Foucher et al, 2009).…”
Section: Deep-sea Carbonate Moundsmentioning
confidence: 99%