Crater formation during the onset of mud volcanism

Three-dimensional (3-D) seismic imaging was used to reveal >2.5-km-wide and >150-m-deep craters at the basal surface of 64 mud volcanoes out of a suite of 86, offshore Egypt. The craters were infilled soon after they formed by successive mud extrusions that combined to build mud volcanoes, as...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pryce, E, Kirkham, C, Cartwright, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Geological Society of America 2023
_version_ 1797110520732450816
author Pryce, E
Kirkham, C
Cartwright, J
author_facet Pryce, E
Kirkham, C
Cartwright, J
author_sort Pryce, E
collection OXFORD
description Three-dimensional (3-D) seismic imaging was used to reveal >2.5-km-wide and >150-m-deep craters at the basal surface of 64 mud volcanoes out of a suite of 86, offshore Egypt. The craters were infilled soon after they formed by successive mud extrusions that combined to build mud volcanoes, as evidenced by onlap fill geometries of the earliest mud flows. We propose that the craters formed as the earliest manifestation of mud volcano formation. We infer that the energy required to excise in situ clays and sands buried and consolidated to depths over 150 m below the seafloor was provided by the highly vigorous venting of a dominantly gas and water mix during the initial eruption, in which gas column height was the critical factor. This primary phase of mud volcanism is rarely observed, and the findings presented here have significant implications for interpretations of the dynamism during this fundamental stage of mud volcano genesis.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:56:00Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:6ba5b934-090c-47cd-a1c1-c09895745e96
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T07:56:00Z
publishDate 2023
publisher Geological Society of America
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:6ba5b934-090c-47cd-a1c1-c09895745e962023-08-17T08:55:03ZCrater formation during the onset of mud volcanismJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:6ba5b934-090c-47cd-a1c1-c09895745e96EnglishSymplectic ElementsGeological Society of America2023Pryce, EKirkham, CCartwright, JThree-dimensional (3-D) seismic imaging was used to reveal >2.5-km-wide and >150-m-deep craters at the basal surface of 64 mud volcanoes out of a suite of 86, offshore Egypt. The craters were infilled soon after they formed by successive mud extrusions that combined to build mud volcanoes, as evidenced by onlap fill geometries of the earliest mud flows. We propose that the craters formed as the earliest manifestation of mud volcano formation. We infer that the energy required to excise in situ clays and sands buried and consolidated to depths over 150 m below the seafloor was provided by the highly vigorous venting of a dominantly gas and water mix during the initial eruption, in which gas column height was the critical factor. This primary phase of mud volcanism is rarely observed, and the findings presented here have significant implications for interpretations of the dynamism during this fundamental stage of mud volcano genesis.
spellingShingle Pryce, E
Kirkham, C
Cartwright, J
Crater formation during the onset of mud volcanism
title Crater formation during the onset of mud volcanism
title_full Crater formation during the onset of mud volcanism
title_fullStr Crater formation during the onset of mud volcanism
title_full_unstemmed Crater formation during the onset of mud volcanism
title_short Crater formation during the onset of mud volcanism
title_sort crater formation during the onset of mud volcanism
work_keys_str_mv AT prycee craterformationduringtheonsetofmudvolcanism
AT kirkhamc craterformationduringtheonsetofmudvolcanism
AT cartwrightj craterformationduringtheonsetofmudvolcanism