Offshore phase of IODP Expedition 386 successfully completed

International participants will meet for the onshore phase to sample and analyse the cores

European Consortium for Ocean Research Drilling (ECORD),
and Institute for Marine-Earth Exploration and Engineering (MarE3) /
Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC)
completed the offshore phase of the IODP Expedition 386: Japan Trench Paleoseismology on 1 June 2021

50 days offshore, more than 830 meters of sediment successfully cored, two new records in scientific ocean drilling: the offshore phase of IODP Expedition 386: Japan Trench Paleoseismology has been successfully completed. The aim of the expedition is to study past giant earthquakes off the coast of Japan – and to help to better assess earthquake hazards in the future. All expedition participants will meet in Japan in the Autumn for the second part of the expedition to examine and analyse the cores.

Two records in scientific ocean drilling were broken during the expedition: the deepest site below sea level ever drilled and cored at a water depth of 8,023 meters and the deepest sub-sea level sample taken at 8,061 mbsl (meters below sea level).

Giant earthquakes occur at convergent plate boundaries where oceanic plates are subducted below overriding plates. Due to the downward bending of the oceanic plates, these plate boundaries form oceanic trenches, the deepest places on our planet, at water depths far below 6,000 meters.

The expedition successfully recovered 832 meters of cores recovered from a total of 15 Sites and 58 Holes cored along the entire Japan Trench from 36°N to 40.5 N, in water depths ranging from 7,445 to 8,023 mbsl.

“To study giant earthquake history and processes along subduction plate boundaries, we have to access the sedimentary records from these ultra-deepwater environments. With the new Giant Piston Corer System onboard the R/V Kaimei it has now become possible to efficiently and safely sample the deeper subsurface in these environments.

IODP Expedition 386 Site M0081, where the water depth is 8,023 meters, now – after more than forty-three years – breaks the record as the deepest site below sea level drilled and cored in scientific ocean drilling history. We greatly acknowledge the tremendous efforts of the Captain of the R/V Kaimai and his crew to safely carry out such challenging ultra-deepwater coring operations and look forward to now undertaking scientific analyses on these samples from the deepest of the deep.”

Prof. Michael Strasser, IODP Exp. 386 Co-chief Scientist

 

“It was really a tough expedition. Many atmospheric low pressure systems and unexpectedly strong Kuroshio Current got in our way. However, we obtained giant piston cores from 15 sites along entire Japan Trench. Preliminary observations and onboard measurements of these cores suggest that we could recover good cores, which we believe contain event deposits with decimeter- to several meter-thickness. These event deposits are possible candidates for past great earthquakes along the Japan Trench. We expect that further analyses of these cores during the onshore sampling party and thereafter will contribute to understanding the spatio-temporal variation of great earthquakes and earthquake-related material transport along the Japan Trench, and to establishing methodology of deep-sea paleoseismology.

Dr. Ken Ikehara, IODP Exp. 386 Co-chief Scientist

 

The expedition was operated by the ECORD Science Operator in close collaboration with the Institute for Marine-Earth Exploration and Engineering (MarE3) within the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC).

Implementing this expedition has been a great challenge. Due to the ongoing pandemic and global travel restrictions, the offshore phase could not be carried out as planned with international scientists. Through the efforts of the Japanese team of scientists, marine technicians and operators, it was possible to fulfil the expedition scientific objectives with solely Japanese staffing. Through careful planning and adopting best hygienic practices, all participants were kept safe and healthy from possible COVID-19 infection.

The successful offshore phase will now be followed by an onshore phase this autumn. 35 scientists with expertise in different geoscience disciplines from Austria, Australia, China, Finland, France, Germany, India, Japan, Korea, Sweden, UK, and the United States participate in IODP Expedition 386. The whole international science team will meet for the first time in the autumn on board the drilling vessel Chikyu, whose laboratory infrastructure will be utilized for intensive investigation and sampling of the cores onshore while the ship is in port. This will involve splitting, describing, analyzing, and sampling the cores, and combining the resulting data with that collected during the offshore phase to compile a comprehensive expedition scientific report. The curated cores and samples will then be a focus for further state-of-the-art analyses by the wider international science community for many years to come.

More information:

Official webpage of Expedition 386:
https://www.ecord.org/expedition386

Press release on the start of the expedition March 2020:
https://www.ecord.org/tracking-past-earthquakes-in-the-sediment-record-expedition-386-japan-trench-paleoseismology/

Expedition 386 blog:
https://expedition386.wordpress.com/

Download official News item (docx):

English  
   

 

About the research programme: http://www.iodp.org/

About the European part of the programme: https://www.ecord.org/

About ECORD Science Operator (ESO): https://www.ecord.org/about-ecord/management-structure/eso/

About the Japanese part of the program  (J-DESC): http://www.j-desc.org/

Contact

Michael Strasser
Co-chief Scientist
University of Innsbruck
Institute of Geology
Email: Michael.Strasser@uibk.ac.at

Ken Ikehara
Co-chief Scientist
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST)
Geological Survey of Japan
Research Institute of Geology and Geoinformation
Email: k-ikehara@aist.go.jp

Contact/interviews/images:

Jez Everest
ECORD Science Operator
MARUM – Center for Marine Environmental Sciences
University of Bremen
Email: jdev@bgs.ac.uk
Phone: +44 131 650 0203

Sanny Saito
Deputy Director
Operations Department, MarE3, JAMSTEC
Email: saito@jamstec.go.jp

Ulrike Prange
ECORD Science Operator
MARUM – Center for Marine Environmental Sciences
University of Bremen
Email: uprange@marum.de
Phone: +49 421 218-65540