Fisher is co-chief scientist of this first IODP expedition, along with Tetsuro Urabe of the University of Tokyo.
“When you drill the hole, you change the temperature and the pressure and you contaminate things, and the only way to get back to equilibrium is to seal it up and let it sit for awhile,” Fisher explained. “The CORKs basically plug the hole. They also have lots of valves and connections where we can hook up to them with a submarine or an ROV [remotely operated vehicle] and take measurements from different intervals in the borehole.”
The researchers plan to put in four observatories this summer. The observatories will enable them to conduct a kind of standard hydrogeologic testing commonly done on land, known as a “cross-hole test.”
“In a cross-hole test, you pump in one hole and monitor in several other holes. No one’s ever done this in the seafloor. The environment is different, but in principle it’s the same thing anyone would do to test an aquifer,” Fisher said.
The expedition (IODP Expedition 301) will depart from Astoria, Oregon, on June 28, 2004, on the research vessel JOIDES Resolution, a well-equipped drilling platform used for years in the ODP. The scientists will be returning to an area about 120 miles (200 kilometers) west of Vancouver Island that Fisher and his collaborators previously studied eight years ago on ODP Leg 168. In a paper published last year in Nature, the researchers reported their discovery of fluid flow between a pair of seamounts in this area that are separated by more than 30 miles (52 kilometers).
“One of the big surprises from Leg 168 was that the flow rates were very high, and yet the driving forces are just a couple of pounds per square inch, not even the equivalent of one atmosphere of pressure,” Fisher said. “The ocean crust is very permeable, with wide open cracks and fractures, so the driving forces are very small.”
The Juan de Fuca Ridge, west of the drill site, is a place where new oceanic crust is being built as two oceanic plates spread apart and fresh lava pours out of the seafloor. To the east, the Juan de Fuca Plate dives beneath the edge of the North American Plate.
This new expedition is an opportunity to ask some basic questions about the plumbing system in the seafloor, Fisher said.
“The upper oceanic crust is the largest aquifer on Earth–it covers two-thirds of the planet. But it’s a complicated system, and we don’t know how well connected it is,” he said. “Can you pump in one place and see a response a kilometer away? If you pump at one depth, can you see a response 500 meters below? Those are very basic questions if you want to build a model of the system. A lot of people have published papers with models of the seafloor and no data–I’ve done it myself. This is an opportunity to get the kind of information we need to understand the system.”
New drillships equipped with different drilling technologies are being developed for the IODP, and Fisher’s group plans to return to the site in a few years with one of these new vessels to conduct additional experiments.
“We’ll drill another hole in between these observatories and then do some experiments where we pump into the formation and monitor the response all around it. We’ll also do long-term experiments where we inject chemical tracers,” he said.
All the water circulating through the ocean crust has implications on land where the oceanic plates are subducted beneath the continental plates. The explosiveness of volcanoes such as Mount St. Helens, for example, is due to water that ends up mixed with molten rock when oceanic plates are subducted deep into the Earth. Water in subduction zones may also affect the behavior of earthquake faults.
The investigation will also address questions that are of general interest to hydrogeologists who study complicated rock systems on land as well as on the seafloor, Fisher said.
The JOIDES Resolution is currently docked in Astoria, Oregon, for the first port call of the IODP. Tours for reporters and other visitors will be given on Friday, June 25. The expedition departs on June 28. For information about the media event on June 25, please contact Regina Deavers at (202) 232-3900 x1614 or rdeavers@joiscience.org.
The IODP is an international scientific research endeavor funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan, and the European Consortium for Ocean Research Drilling to conduct basic research into the history of the ocean basins and the overall nature of the crust beneath the seafloor. IODP will use new resources to support technologically advanced ocean drilling research, which will enable investigation of Earth’s regions and processes that were previously inaccessible and poorly understood.
The Joint Oceanographic Institutions (JOI), a consortium of 20 academic institutions, leads U.S. participation in the IODP through the U.S. Science Support Program (see joiscience.org). Through an alliance with Texas A&M University and Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, JOI leads the operations of a riserless vessel in IODP that is funded by NSF. Japan and the European Consortium for Ocean Research Drilling will also operate platforms in the program. Japan will contribute Chikyu, a $500 million riser vessel that will begin service in 2006, and Europe will operate mission-specific platforms to ice-covered and shallow-water regions.
.
The most damning statement is from professor Fisher, who says, “A lot of people have published papers with models of the seafloor and no data–I’ve done it myself.”
It make me wonder if they’re trying to understand the seafloor geology or trying to prove a pet theory. I think they should put a cork in it until they have something substantial.
jon