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A Miocene Mud Volcano and its Plumbing System: A Chaotic Complex Revisited (Monferrato, NW Italy)

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors presented a well-exposed example of the geological record of the birth, life, and death of a mud volcano, showing that the chimneys were the pathway for the expulsion toward the sea floor of gas-and sediment-charged fluids likely originated from destabilization of methane gas hydrates.
Abstract
Chaotic deposits are frequently reported in the geological literature and are commonly interpreted as olistostromes or tectonic melanges. A chaotic complex in the Cenozoic succession of Monferrato (NW Italy) consists of interbedded mud breccia and burrowed silty clays that are pierced by sheared mud breccias and embed carbonate-cemented blocks. These may be represented by microcrystalline limestones or strongly cemented matrix-supported breccias locally containing remains of chemosymbiotic organisms (lucinid bivalves). Moreover, cylindrical concretions, up to 15 cm in diameter and 1 m long, occur in the chaotic complex and crosscut bedding planes at high angles. The cement of all these lithified portions is mainly dolomite characterized by low 13C values (from -10.3 to -23‰ PDB) and 18O values up to +7‰ PDB. The 13C values testify to precipitation of carbonates induced by microbial oxidation of methane, whereas the markedly positive 18O signature, ubiquitous in the cylindrical concretions, is the evidence for the presence and destabilization of gas hydrates. The studied section provides a well-exposed example of the geological record of the birth, life, and death of a mud volcano. Unsheared, soft mud breccias represent mud flows along the flanks of the volcano, whereas sheared mud breccias are the result of the injection of unconsolidated overpressured fine-grained sediments, both taking place during "eruptive" phases. They were followed by more quiet stages of hemipelagic sedimentation, burrowing, and CH4 seeping. The cylindrical concretions represent the first described ancient example of the chimneys observed in present-day mud-volcano settings. They are the remnants of a cold-seep plumbing network that crosscut the mud volcano edifice. The chimneys were the pathway for the expulsion toward the sea floor of gas- and sediment-charged fluids likely originated from destabilization of methane gas hydrates. The association of mud breccias and methane-derived carbonates may not be due to mass gravity flows but can be primary and, therefore, is a diagnostic criterion for recognizing chaotic deposits due to mud volcano activity in the geological record.

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Mélanges and mélange-forming processes: a historical overview and new concepts

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a historical overview of the evolving melange concept and investigate the relationships between melange types and their tectonic settings of formation, investigating the contribution of mass-transport versus contractional deformation processes at the onset of melange formation and throughout the evolution of different melange type.
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Mud volcanism: An updated review

TL;DR: In this article, an updated review of the knowledge and implications of mud volcanism is presented, with emphasis on: the terminology used to describe different processes and structures; physical, chemical and morphological characteristics of the several fluid emission structures; the chemical properties of the released fluids, in particular the molecular and isotopic composition of the gas; the mud volcano formation dynamics; and the several implications for petroleum exploration, geo-hazards and global atmospheric methane budget.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seismic characteristics of fluid escape pipes in sedimentary basins: Implications for pipe genesis

TL;DR: Fluid escape pipes were first documented from 3D seismic data over a decade ago, and have subsequently been identified in many petroliferous basins worldwide as discussed by the authors, and they are characterized on seismic data by vertical to sub-vertical zones of reduced reflection continuity that have a columnar geometry in three-dimensions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structure and emplacement of mud volcano systems in the South Caspian Basin

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used 3D seismic data from the South Caspian Basin to investigate the structural elements and evolution of the mud volcano system, which can look like intrusive laccoliths at first glance on seismic data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Barium cycling in shallow sediment above active mud volcanoes in the Gulf of Mexico

TL;DR: Piston cores across two mud volcanoes in the northern Gulf of Mexico (GOM) were examined to understand Ba cycling at regions of intense hydrocarbon gas expulsion as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the Isotopic Chemistry of Carbonates and a Paleotemperature Scale

TL;DR: In this paper, the temperature variation of the fractionation of oxygen in exchange reactions between dissolved carbonate and water and between calcite and water was calculated on theoretical grounds, and checked experimentally.
Journal ArticleDOI

Significance of mud volcanism

TL;DR: The authors summarizes the main thrusts in mud volcano research as well as the various regions in which mud volcanism has been described, including the collision zones between Africa and Eurasia, where fluid flux through mud extrusion exceeds the compaction-driven pore fluid expulsion of the accretionary wedge.
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Mud volcanoes—the most important pathway for degassing deeply buried sediments

L. Dimitrov
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the nature of the phenomenon of "mud volcanism" with respect to degassing of deeply buried sediments and discuss the basic mechanisms of mud volcano formation, specifically the fluid-pressure hypothesis, and some triggering events.
Journal ArticleDOI

Methane-derived authigenic carbonates formed by subduction-induced pore-water expulsion along the Oregon/Washington margin

TL;DR: Authigenic magnesian calcite, dolomite, and aragonite are precipitated in the uppermost terrigenous sediments of the Washington/Oregon accretionary prism by subduction-induced dewatering.
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Anaerobic methane oxidation rates at the sulfate‐methane transition in marine sediments from Kattegat and Skagerrak (Denmark)

TL;DR: In this paper, the in situ rates of sulfate reduction and anaerobic methane oxidation in 2-3m-long sediment cores were made, with a broad maximum below the sediment surface and a smaller, narrow maximum at the sulfate-methane transition.
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