Discovery of a conical feature in Halmahera waters, Indonesia: traces of a late-stage hydrothermal activity
-
Published:2023-10-13
Issue:1
Volume:10
Page:
-
ISSN:2196-4092
-
Container-title:Geoscience Letters
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Geosci. Lett.
Author:
Alodia GabriellaORCID, Nurhidayat , Sobarudin Dyan P., Adrianto Dian, Dwinovantyo Angga, Solikin Steven, Hanafi Mustafa, Pamumpuni Astyka, Kurniawan Idham A., Poerbandono , Green Chris M., McCaig Andrew M.
Abstract
AbstractAn expedition to confirm the presence of underwater hazards was carried out in Halmahera waters, Indonesia, to the west of Halmahera Island from August to September 2021. The expedition carried out a multibeam survey, surface-towed magnetic survey, and seafloor sampling. A ~ 615-m-tall conical feature with traces of hydrothermal activity was discovered. The feature is bounded on the southeastern (SE) side by a series of normal faults at the peak, with possible dextral strike-slip faults traced west of the feature. The feature displays the potential presence of volcanic rocks based on the observed contrasting magnetic anomaly signature of down to − 100 nT, which at the magnetic equator corresponds to the presence of highly magnetised material. Four 2.5-D magnetic models were built to test various scenarios on the subsurface structure of the feature, mainly focusing on the presence of volcanic rocks at different epochs and a possible presence of serpentinisation. X-ray diffraction (XRD) of the silt and clay sediments sampled confirms traces of late-stage hydrothermal activity, indicated by a high percentage of quartz (53.87%), followed by calcite (34.56%), kaolinite (6.54%), and illite minerals (5.04%). Non-carbonate materials are yet to be found in the sampled sand and gravel sediments, which mainly consist of shell and coral fragments. The discovery of the conical feature, now termed the Yudo Sagoro Hill, provides new information on the structure and activities on the seafloor of Halmahera waters.
Funder
Hydro-Oceanographic Centre of the Indonesian Navy Institut Teknologi Bandung
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Reference66 articles.
1. Aina A (1986) Reduction to equator, reduction to pole and orthogonal reduction of magnetic profiles. Explor Geophys 17(3):141–145 2. Alken P, Thébault E, Beggan CD, Amit H, Aubert J, Baerenzung J, Bondar TN, Brown WJ, Califf S, Chambodut A, Chulliat A, Cox GA, Finlay CC, Fournier A, Gillet N, Grayver A, Hammer MD, Holschneider M, Huder L, Hulot G, Jager T, Kloss C, Korte M, Kuang W, Kuvshinov A, Langlais B, Léger J-M, Lesur V, Livermore PW, Lowes FJ, Macmillan S, Magnes W, Mandea M, Marsal S, Matzka J, Metman MC, Minami T, Morschhauser A, Mound JE, Nair M, Nakano S, Olsen N, Pavón-Carrasco FJ, Petrov VG, Ropp G, Rother M, Sabaka TJ, Sanchez S, Saturnino D, Schnepf NR, Shen X, Stolle C, Tangborn A, Tøffner-Clausen L, Toh H, Torta JM, Varner J, Vervelidou F, Vigneron P, Wardinski I, Wicht J, Woods A, Yang Y, Zeren Z, Zhou B (2021) International Geomagnetic Reference Field: the thirteenth generation. Earth Planets Space 73(1):49 3. Ballantyne P (1991) Petrological constraints upon the provenance and genesis of the East Halmahera ophiolite. J Southeast Asian Earth Sci 6(3–4):259–269 4. Ballantyne P (1992) Petrology and geochemistry of the plutonic rocks of the Halmahera ophiolite, eastern Indonesia, an analogue of modern oceanic forearcs. Geol Soc London Spec Publ 60(1):179–202 5. Bloomer SH (1983) Distribution and origin of igneous rocks from the landward slopes of the Mariana Trench: Implications for its structure and evolution. J Geophys Res Solid Earth 88(B9):7411–7428
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|