Koko Guyot Explained

Koko Guyot
Height:5000m (16,000feet)
Map:Map
Group:Isolated
Coordinates:35.25°N 206°W[1]
Age:48.1 million
Last Eruption:40 million years ago
First Visit:1973, ODP Site 308

Koko Guyot is a 48.1-million-year-old guyot,[2] a type of underwater volcano with a flat top, which lies near the southern end of the Emperor seamounts, about 2000NaN0 north of the "bend" in the volcanic Hawaiian-Emperor seamount chain.[3] Pillow lava has been sampled on the north west flank of Koko Seamount, and the oldest dated lava is 40 million years old.[4] Seismic studies indicate that it is built on a 90NaN0 thick portion of the Pacific Plate.[5] The oldest rock from the north side of Koko Seamount is dated at 52.6 and the south side of Koko at 50.4 million years ago. To the southeast of the bend is Kimmei Seamount at 47.9 million years ago and southeast of it, Daikakuji at 46.7.[6]

Geology and characteristics

The seamount was named for the 58th emperor of Japan, Emperor Koko (A.D. 885-887) by geologist Thomas Davies and his colleagues in 1972, based on the results from a bathymetric expedition and contents of two dredge hauls, led by Thomas Washington and undertaken with the ship Aries-7. The seamount is elongate in shape, aligned northwest-southeast (the same direction as the chain), and has a gentle slope and a large, flat top. Koko Seamount also has a lot of small reefal bodies on its slopes. It rises from the abyssal floor about 5000m (16,000feet) in height.

A prominent south-trending ridge extends about 500NaN0 from the summit area in the direction of Kimmei Seamount, to the southeast. The base of the guyot is similar to a "pedestal," and is composed of consolidated lavas and extinct volcanic centers of the volcano's formally active history; it is similar to structure to the pedestal found at the base of most of the other, usually larger Emperor seamounts. However, a thick carbonate cap, similar to the one covering Detroit Seamount, makes it difficult to find the exact eruptive centers. The volcano is clearly isolated, even in comparison to other seamounts in the spread-out Emperor chain, with Ojin Seamount about 2000NaN0 to the northwest and Kimmei Seamount 1000NaN0 to the southeast. The seamount is located just 2.3 degrees north of the bend.

Much of what we know about Koko comes from early dredgings and the Ocean Drilling Program's core samples, collected as part of Leg 197, at Site 1206, which aimed to supply information on the relatively obscure Emperor seamounts and study their relation to the Hawaiian chain.[7] [8] Site 1206 was the last and southernmost drilling site during Leg 197, and was located on the southeastern side of the lower summit terrace of Koko Seamount. A seismic survey of the region was utilized to locate a suitable place for the drill site, initially targeted near Site 308, drilled in 1973 during Leg 32. Weather conditions during the drilling had prevented it from reaching 68.50NaN0 in depth, the approximate depth of the sediment cover in the region. Due to a shortage of time, priority was placed on finding a region with a thin sedimentary cover. The site eventually chosen was located at a water depth of 15450NaN0, 6.20NaN0 south of Site 308, at coordinates 34.9258°N 180.75°W. The sediment cover at this site was less than half that at the 1973 drill site, and rock was hit at a subsurface depth of 570NaN0. Drilling continued to 2780NaN0 into the slopes.

The top 570NaN0 of sediment included fossil-rich calcarenite and calcium-rich mudstone and siltstone, indicating a shallow-water setting at the time of deposition. The lower part of the core sample recovered a 150NaN0 to 200NaN0 section of shell-bearing mudstone containing many microfossils typical of the early to middle Eocene (43.5-49.7 Ma). This age range fits well with a radiometric analysis (48.1 Ma) reported for a dredged rock from Koko Seamount from the 1973 expedition. Although shell fragments had been recovered from the sediment cover in 1973, none of these deposits contained microfossils.

Lava flows dominate the lithology of the main body, with a small proportion of calcarenite. Many lavas were pahoehoe flows laced with a'a, evidence of subaerial eruptions. There was a large amount of variation in the density, structure, porosity, and grain size of the recovered volcanic rock, varying widely with depth. The bulk of the volcanic rock is basalt of aphyric to olivine-phyric lava, and tholeiitic or alkalic in composition. The basaltic lavas from Koko Seamount resemble those drilled during Leg 55, at Suiko Seamount.

Studies suggested that the magnetic arrangement of the rock, used to determine its latitude at formation (magnets align to the North pole; also, the drift and position of the Hawaii hotspot at various times is important to hotspot studies), were relatively stable. 14 magnetic groupings were found on the seamount, yielding a mean latitude of 38.5 degrees south of the seamount's present location (the percent of error is +8.4°/-10.9°). That would put the seamount at 21.7° N in latitude during its early history, before the Pacific Plate moved it to its current position relative to Earth.

Ancient ecology

Dredged carbonate samples from the top of the seamount contained porites and several other corals, covered by coralline algae at shallow to medium depth. Also present were Amphistegina, red algae (mainly Lithothamnion and Sporolithon), lepidocyclines, bryozoans, and coralline at deeper depths. The recorded lepidocyclinids indicate an Early Miocene age for the drowned carbonate platforms found on the seamount, at about 5000NaN0.[9]

See also

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Seamount Catalog. Seamounts database. EarthRef, a National Science Foundation project. 2009-04-09.
  2. Web site: HOTSPOTS AND PLATE MOTION. Dyar. Darby. 2009-04-04. 2011-06-07. https://web.archive.org/web/20110607032522/http://www.mtholyoke.edu/courses/mdyar/ast106/earth_hw_a.html. dead.
  3. Web site: 6. Site 12061 BACKGROUND AND SCIENTIFIC OBJECTIVES . Drilling Site Recommendation Submission for Koko. Ocean Drilling Program. 2009-04-09.
  4. Web site: Koko Seamount, NW Flank - John Seach. Seach . John. Volcanic database. Volcano Live.com. 2009-04-09.
  5. Web site: Crust and upper mantle structure along the flank of Koko Seamount. K. FURUKAWA . J. F. GETTRUST . L. W. KROENKE . J. F. Campbell . Scientific Paper-Abstract. Hawaii Institute of Geophysics University of Hawaii, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822 . 2009-04-09. 1980.
  6. Web site: Hawaiian geology gets update. TenBruggencate. Jan. 2006. Honolulu Advertiser web article. Honolulu Advertiser. 2009-04-09.
  7. Web site: SITE 1206. Ocean Drilling Program Database-Results of Site 1206. Ocean Drilling Program. 2009-04-09.
  8. Web site: DRILLING STRATEGY. Ocean Drilling Program - Leg 197 Proposal. Ocean Drilling Program. 2009-04-09.
  9. Web site: Lower Miocene submerged reefs on the Koko Seamount. David A. Clauge . Juan C. Braga . Jody M. Webster . Davide Bassi . Willen Renema . Essay Abstract. 2009-04-09.