2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.dsr2.2018.09.011
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Fluids and processes at the seismically active fault zone in the Sea of Marmara

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Cited by 4 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…In this paper, we report the analytical results of bulk carbonates in two sediment cores collected from two important morphotectonic provinces in the SoM: the Western High and the Çınarcık Basin. The Western High is a compressional area characterized by seepage of thermogenic methane and heavy hydrocarbons, presence of gas hydrate, and relatively low sedimentation rates (30–40 cm/Kyr), whereas the Çınarcık Basin is one of the three deep (~1,250 m) transtentional subbasins, represented by emission of mainly biogenic methane and high (>1 m/Kyr) sedimentation rates (e.g., Armijo et al, ; Çağatay & Ucarkus, ; Ruffine et al, ; Zitter et al, ). To investigate the origin of the bulk carbonates in the two sediment cores from the Western High and the Çınarcık Basin, we analyzed the bulk carbonates for their stable carbon and oxygen isotopic and mineral compositions, together with the elemental concentrations and strontium isotopes in the selectively dissolved solutions of carbonates in chosen sediment samples.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 74%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In this paper, we report the analytical results of bulk carbonates in two sediment cores collected from two important morphotectonic provinces in the SoM: the Western High and the Çınarcık Basin. The Western High is a compressional area characterized by seepage of thermogenic methane and heavy hydrocarbons, presence of gas hydrate, and relatively low sedimentation rates (30–40 cm/Kyr), whereas the Çınarcık Basin is one of the three deep (~1,250 m) transtentional subbasins, represented by emission of mainly biogenic methane and high (>1 m/Kyr) sedimentation rates (e.g., Armijo et al, ; Çağatay & Ucarkus, ; Ruffine et al, ; Zitter et al, ). To investigate the origin of the bulk carbonates in the two sediment cores from the Western High and the Çınarcık Basin, we analyzed the bulk carbonates for their stable carbon and oxygen isotopic and mineral compositions, together with the elemental concentrations and strontium isotopes in the selectively dissolved solutions of carbonates in chosen sediment samples.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 74%
“…Warm and local evaporative conditions in the SoM “lake” during the pre‐Bølling‐Allerød period (Vidal et al, ) may have contributed to the gas hydrate dissociation. The shallow occurrence of gas hydrate in the SoM (Ruffine et al, ) makes the gas hydrates even more vulnerable to the temperature and sea level perturbations. Ménot and Bard () found the hopanoid maxima over the last 15 ka and linked it to methanotrophic activity, providing the first geochemical evidence for a large release of methane during the last deglaciation in SoM (Ménot & Bard, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The Sea of Marmara has also been shown to be a unique, natural laboratory to improve our understanding of the rela-tionships between fault activity, seismicity, fluid migration and ecosystems at a major, transform plate boundary (e.g. Ruffine et al 2018a;Hensen et al 2019):…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During the third leg, sediment samples from long-gravity cores were collected to complete dat-ing of seismic reflector surfaces in view of establishing chronostratigraphy for the last hundred thousand years. A Special Issue, entitled "Fluids and processes at the seismically active fault zone in the Sea of Marmara", was published in 2018 in Deep Sea Research, Part II, provid-ing the state of knowledge on the links between fluids, faults, seismicity and the hydrocarbon system in the Sea of Marmara (Ruffine et al 2018a). A new strategy was deployed during the MarsiteCruise for gas-seep sampling and for developing new proxies to relate fluid properties to fluid migration history.…”
Section: Fluid Emissions and Their Originmentioning
confidence: 99%