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Dive into the research topics where G. Bayrakci is active.

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Featured researches published by G. Bayrakci.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Continental hyperextension, mantle exhumation, and thin oceanic crust at the continent‐ocean transition, West Iberia: New insights from wide‐angle seismic

R. G. Davy; Timothy A. Minshull; G. Bayrakci; Jonathan M. Bull; Dirk Klaeschen; Cord Papenberg; Timothy J. Reston; Dale S. Sawyer; C. A. Zelt

Hyperextension of continental crust at the Deep Galicia rifted margin in the North Atlantic has been accommodated by the rotation of continental fault blocks, which are underlain by the S reflector, an interpreted detachment fault, along which exhumed and serpentinized mantle peridotite is observed. West of these features, the enigmatic Peridotite Ridge has been inferred to delimit the western extent of the continent-ocean transition. An outstanding question at this margin is where oceanic crust begins, with little existing data to constrain this boundary and a lack of clear seafloor spreading magnetic anomalies. Here we present results from a 160 km long wide-angle seismic profile (Western Extension 1). Travel time tomography models of the crustal compressional velocity structure reveal highly thinned and rotated crustal blocks separated from the underlying mantle by the S reflector. The S reflector correlates with the 6.0–7.0 km s−1 velocity contours, corresponding to peridotite serpentinization of 60–30%, respectively. West of the Peridotite Ridge, shallow and sparse Moho reflections indicate the earliest formation of an anomalously thin oceanic crustal layer, which increases in thickness from ~0.5 km at ~20 km west of the Peridotite Ridge to ~1.5 km, 35 km further west. P wave velocities increase smoothly and rapidly below top basement, to a depth of 2.8–3.5 km, with an average velocity gradient of 1.0 s−1. Below this, velocities slowly increase toward typical mantle velocities. Such a downward increase into mantle velocities is interpreted as decreasing serpentinization of mantle rock with depth.


Nature Communications | 2017

Dehydration of subducting slow-spread oceanic lithosphere in the Lesser Antilles

Michele Paulatto; Mireille Laigle; Audrey Galve; Philippe Charvis; Martine Sapin; G. Bayrakci; M. Evain; Heidrun Kopp

Subducting slabs carry water into the mantle and are a major gateway in the global geochemical water cycle. Fluid transport and release can be constrained with seismological data. Here we use joint active-source/local-earthquake seismic tomography to derive unprecedented constraints on multi-stage fluid release from subducting slow-spread oceanic lithosphere. We image the low P-wave velocity crustal layer on the slab top and show that it disappears beneath 60–100 km depth, marking the depth of dehydration metamorphism and eclogitization. Clustering of seismicity at 120–160 km depth suggests that the slab’s mantle dehydrates beneath the volcanic arc, and may be the main source of fluids triggering arc magma generation. Lateral variations in seismic properties on the slab surface suggest that serpentinized peridotite exhumed in tectonized slow-spread crust near fracture zones may increase water transport to sub-arc depths. This results in heterogeneous water release and directly impacts earthquakes generation and mantle wedge dynamics.


Journal of Petrology | 2018

Alteration Heterogeneities in Peridotites Exhumed on the Southern Wall of the Atlantis Massif (IODP Expedition 357)

Stéphane Rouméjon; Gretchen L. Früh-Green; Beth N. Orcutt; S.L. Green; Carol J. Cotterill; Sally Morgan; Norikatsu Akizawa; G. Bayrakci; Jan Hinrich Behrmann; Emilio Herrero-Bervera; Chiara Boschi; William J. Brazelton; Mathilde Cannat; Kristina G. Dunkel; J. Escartin; Michelle Harris; Kirsten Hesse; Barbara E. John; Susan Q. Lang; Marvin D. Lilley; Hai-Quan Liu; Lisa E. Mayhew; Andrew McGaig; Bénédicte Ménez; Yuki Morono; Marianne Quéméneur; Amila Sandaruwan Ratnayake; Matthew O. Schrenk; Esther M. Schwarzenbach; Katrina I. Twing

Serpentinized and metasomatized peridotites intruded by gabbros and dolerites have been drilled on the southern wall of the Atlantis Massif (Mid-Atlantic Ridge, 30°N) during International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 357. They occur in seven holes from five sites making up an east-west trending, spreading-parallel profile that crosscuts this exhumed detachment footwall. Here we have taken advantage of this sampling to study heterogeneities of alteration at scales less than a kilometer. We combine textural and mineralogical observations made on 77 samples with in situ major and trace element analyses in primary and serpentine minerals to provide a conceptual model for the development of alteration heterogeneities at the Atlantis Massif. Textural sequences and mineralogical assemblages reveal a transition between an initial pervasive phase of serpentinization and subsequent serpentinization and metasomatism focused along localized pathways preferentially used by hydrothermal fluids. We propose that these localized pathways are interconnected and form 100 m- to 1 km-sized cells in the detachment footwall. This change in fluid pathway distribution is accompanied by variable trace element enrichments in the serpentine textures: deep, syn-serpentinization fluid-peridotite interactions are considered the source of Cu, Zn, As, and Sb enrichments, whereas U and Sr enrichments are interpreted as markers of later, shallower fluid-serpentinized peridotite interaction. Alteration of gabbros and dolerites emplaced in the peridotite at different lithospheric levels leads to the development of amphibole, chlorite and, or, talc-bearing textures as well as enrichments in LREE, Nb, Y, Th, Ta in the serpentine textures of the surrounding peridotites. Combining these observations, we propose a model that places the drill holes in a conceptual frame involving mafic intrusions in the peridotites and heterogeneities during progressive alteration and emplacement on the seafloor.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Moho depth and crustal thinning in the Marmara Sea region from gravity data inversion

Julia Kende; Pierre Henry; G. Bayrakci; M.S. Özeren; Céline Grall

The free-air gravity in the Marmara Sea reveals that the low density of sedimentary basins is partly compensated in the lower crust. We compiled geophysical upper crust studies to determine the sediment basin geometries in and around the Marmara Sea and corrected the gravity signal from this upper crust geology with the Parker method. Then, assuming long wavelength anomalies in the residual gravity signal is caused by variations in the Moho topography, we inverted the residual to build the Moho topography. The result shows that the Moho is uplifted on an area greater than the Marmara Sea with a maximum crust thinning beneath the basins where the Moho is at about 25?km, 5?km above the reference depth. We then evaluated the Neogene extension by comparing the surface covered by our 3-D thinned model with the surface covered by an unthinned model with same crustal volume. Comparing this surface with areal extension rate from GPS data, we found a good compatibility indicating that the extension rate averaged over the Sea of Marmara area probably remained close to its present-day value during major changes of tectonic regime, as the incursion of the North Anatolian Fault system during the Pliocene leads to the establishment of the dominantly strike-slip present-day system. We also show that crustal extension is distributed over a wider domain in the lower crust than in the upper crust, and that this may be accounted for by a relatively minor component of lower crustal ductile flow.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Gas and seismicity within the Istanbul seismic gap

Louis Géli; Pierre Henry; Céline Grall; Jean-Baptiste Tary; Anthony Lomax; Evangelia Batsi; Vincent Riboulot; Estelle Cros; Cemil Gürbüz; S. E. Isik; A. M. C. Sengör; X. Le Pichon; Livio Ruffine; Stéphanie Dupré; Yannick Thomas; Dogan Kalafat; G. Bayrakci; Quentin Coutellier; Thibaut Regnier; Graham K. Westbrook; Hakan Sarıtaş; Günay Çifçi; M.N. Çağatay; M.S. Özeren; Naci Görür; M. Tryon; Marco Bohnhoff; Luca Gasperini; Frauke Klingelhoefer; Carla Scalabrin

Understanding micro-seismicity is a critical question for earthquake hazard assessment. Since the devastating earthquakes of Izmit and Duzce in 1999, the seismicity along the submerged section of North Anatolian Fault within the Sea of Marmara (comprising the “Istanbul seismic gap”) has been extensively studied in order to infer its mechanical behaviour (creeping vs locked). So far, the seismicity has been interpreted only in terms of being tectonic-driven, although the Main Marmara Fault (MMF) is known to strike across multiple hydrocarbon gas sources. Here, we show that a large number of the aftershocks that followed the M 5.1 earthquake of July, 25th 2011 in the western Sea of Marmara, occurred within a zone of gas overpressuring in the 1.5–5 km depth range, from where pressurized gas is expected to migrate along the MMF, up to the surface sediment layers. Hence, gas-related processes should also be considered for a complete interpretation of the micro-seismicity (~M < 3) within the Istanbul offshore domain.


Archive | 2018

CHIMNEY (James Cook 152) multibeam bathymetry (MB710) data from Scanner Pockmark, North Sea

Jonathan M. Bull; G. Bayrakci; Timothy J. Henstock

Multibeam bathymetry data were collected around the Scanner Pockmark in the northern North Sea, by RRS James Cook (JC152) in August-September 2017 during the CHIMNEY survey (NERC grant NE/N016130/1). The multibeam data were acquired using MB710 along the seismic profiles and processed by the JC152 Science Party. Two grids are available, a larger area (10 m grid interval), and a dense (2.5 m interval) grid provides the micro bathymetry around the Scanner and Scotia pockmarks. Two jpeg images are available to see the lateral extent of the data. Please refer to CHIMNEY NERC grant reference NE/N016130/1 and this DOI when using this data.


Nature Geoscience | 2016

Fault-controlled hydration of the upper mantle during continental rifting

G. Bayrakci; Timothy A. Minshull; Dale S. Sawyer; Timothy J. Reston; Dirk Klaeschen; Cord Papenberg; César R. Ranero; Jonathan M. Bull; R. G. Davy; Donna J. Shillington; Marta Perez-Gussinye; Julia K. Morgan


Geophysical Journal International | 2013

3-D sediment-basement tomography of the Northern Marmara trough by a dense OBS network at the nodes of a grid of controlled source profiles along the North Anatolian fault

G. Bayrakci; Mireille Laigle; A. Bécel; Alfred Hirn; Tuncay Taymaz; Seda Yolsal-Çevikbilen; Seismarmara team


Marine Geophysical Researches | 2014

Acoustic monitoring of gas emissions from the seafloor. Part II: a case study from the Sea of Marmara

G. Bayrakci; Carla Scalabrin; Stéphanie Dupré; Isabelle Leblond; Jean-Baptiste Tary; Nadine Lanteri; Jean-Marie Augustin; Laurent Berger; Estelle Cros; André Ogor; Christos Tsabaris; Marc Lescanne; Louis Géli


Tectonophysics | 2013

Seismic Activity offshore Martinique and Dominica islands (Central Lesser Antilles subduction zone) from temporary onshore and offshore seismic networks

M. Ruiz; A. Galvé; Tony Monfret; Martine Sapin; Philippe Charvis; Mireille Laigle; M. Evain; Alfred Hirn; Ernst R. Flueh; J. Gallart; Jordi Diaz; Jean-Frédéric Lebrun; G. Bayrakci; Anne Becel; Audrey Gailler; Y. Hello; Heidrun Kopp; Anne Krabbenhoeft; Cord Papenberg; Lars Planert; Wolfgang Weinzierl

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Angus I. Best

National Oceanography Centre

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Ismael Falcon-Suarez

National Oceanography Centre

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Laurence North

National Oceanography Centre

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R. G. Davy

University of Southampton

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Mireille Laigle

Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris

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