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Featured researches published by H. Villinger.


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 1997

An unequivocal case for high Nusselt number hydrothermal convection in sediment-buried igneous oceanic crust

Earl E. Davis; Kelin Wang; Jiangheng He; David S. Chapman; H. Villinger; Andreas Rosenberger

New observations of seafloor heat flow, precisely located along seismic reflection profiles crossing a buried ridge on the eastern flank of the Juan de Fuca Ridge, show a nearly exact inverse correlation between heat flow and sediment thickness, such that the basement-sediment contact appears isothermal to within 10 K, despite a factor of three local variation in sediment thickness. We have used these observations with numerical models to infer hydrothermal heat-transport properties of the upper oceanic crust at this 3.5 Ma site. Model results show that, while fluid circulation is stimulated by the effects of basement topography even at sub-critical Rayleigh number conditions, the creation of a nearly isothermal basement surface requires very high heat-transport efficiency. Lower limits for the Nusselt number ( Nu ≥ 25), for the Rayleigh number ( Ra ≥ 4000), and for the permeability (κ ≥ 10−11 m2), are provided by assuming that high permeability is distributed throughout the uppermost 600 m of relatively low-velocity igneous crust at this site. Relatively high permeability can also be inferred by considering the calculated fluid pressure regime in light of what is known about the relationship between fluid seepage through the sediment section and the underlying basement topography from geochemical data: Local super-hydro-static pressure and fluid discharge above buried basement ridges can occur only if basement permeability is higher than 10−13 m2. Unfortunately, no constraint on the actual distribution of high permeability below the top of the igneous crust is provided by the thermal regime based on the heat-flow and seismic observations. Equally uniform upper basement temperatures can be produced by fluid flow in a thinner layer (of thickness h) having a correspondingly higher Nusselt number and permeability. Only the products of Nu × h, and κ × h2 are constrained. Bulk permeabilities (averaged over intervals a few hundred meters thick) measured in boreholes that have penetrated the upper oceanic crust are typically less than 10−13 m2. The much higher formation-scale permeability we infer may be a consequence of the relative youth of the crust at this site, although it is more likely that the interconnected fractures and extrusive volcanic unit contacts and voids that contribute most to the bulk formation permeability are relatively infrequent and not representatively sampled by drilling.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Observations of long‐duration episodic bottom currents in the Middle America Trench: Evidence for tidally initiated turbidity flows

Richard E. Thomson; Earl E. Davis; Martin Heesemann; H. Villinger

[1]xa0Benthic flow in the Middle America Trench off the Pacific coast of Costa Rica is examined using time series from a single-point acoustic current meter moored 21 m above bottom at 4386 m depth at the southern end of the trench from November 2005 to April 2007. In addition to significant (∼0.1 m s−1) tidal currents, the instrument recorded a series of 12 episodic northwestward along-trench flow events of roughly monthly duration. Event velocities often exceeded 0.25 m s−1 and were contemporary with enhanced acoustic backscatter intensity. Events ended with a rapid (<1 day) reversal to southeastward flow and reduced backscatter. Seafloor temperature records from two nearby Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) borehole observatory sites reveal that the flow events were accompanied by a steady rise in bottom water temperature. Temperatures dropped abruptly to background values at the end of each event. The event timing generally tracked the envelope of the tidal current modulation. On the basis of the November 2002 to February 2009 borehole observatory temperature records, the events had a mean duration of 40(±20) days and were separated by a between-event interlude of 30(±25) days. Findings indicate that the episodic flows were likely rotationally modified, autosuspending turbidity currents initiated by tidal current resuspension of sediments above the shoaling trench floor to the southeast of the mooring site. Suspended particles in the turbidity currents are estimated to range from 0.0003% to 0.006% of the current by volume. Results suggest that tidally induced turbidity currents may be common to steep, well-mixed regions of the deep ocean adjacent to sediment rich continental margins.


Archive | 2004

Site surveys related to IODP Expedition 301; ImageFlux (S0149) and RetroFlux (TN116) expeditions and earlier studies

L. Zuehlsdorff; M. Hutnak; Andrew T. Fisher; Volkhard Spiess; Earl E. Davis; Mladen R. Nedimovic; Suzanne M. Carbotte; H. Villinger; Keir Becker; Tetsuro Urabe; Adam Klaus; Gerardo J. Iturrino; Anne Bartetzko; Rosalind M. Coggon; Marion Dumont; Bert Engelen; Shusaku Goto; Lisa Hawkins; Verena B Heuer; Samuel M Hulme; Fumio Inagaki; Shoichi Kiyokawa; Mark A. Lever; Satoshi Nakagawa; Mark Nielsen; Takuroh Noguchi; William W. Sager; Masumi Sakaguchi; B. O. Steinsbu; Takeshi Tsuji


The EGU General Assembly | 2007

Seaward thermal and structural variability along the rupture area of the 1960 Chile Earthquake and its impact on the seismogenic updip limit

Martin Heesemann; Ingo Grevemeyer; H. Villinger; Ernst R. Flueh; Martin Scherwath; David Völker; Eduardo Contreras-Reyes


[Talk] In: SONNE Statusseminar, 12.02.-13.02, Bremerhaven . | 2009

SO195 - Geophysikalische Untersuchungen der Steuerungsmechanismen von Lücken in der Erdbebenverteilung bedingt durch die Subduktion von Tiefseekuppen am Beispiel der Subduktionszone von Tonga

Ingo Grevemeyer; Ernst R. Flueh; Eduardo Contreras-Reyes; A. B. Watts; Norbert E Kaul; H. Villinger; Cord Papenberg; Lars Planert


Heesemann, Martin, Völker, David, Grevemeyer, Ingo, Villinger, Heiner, Scherwath, Martin and Contreras-Reyes, Eduardo and TIPTEQ Research Group (2007) Bestimmung der Temperaturverteilung in der Bruchzone des großen Chile Erdbebens von 1960 [Talk] In: SONNE Statusseminar "Meeresforschung mit FS SONNE", 14.-15.02.2007, Kiel, Germany. | 2007

Bestimmung der Temperaturverteilung in der Bruchzone des großen Chile Erdbebens von 1960

Martin Heesemann; David Völker; Ingo Grevemeyer; H. Villinger; Martin Scherwath; Eduardo Contreras-Reyes


The EGU General Assembly | 2006

Thermal state of the seismogenic plate boundary in central Chile, 36 °S

Martin Heesemann; Ingo Grevemeyer; H. Villinger; Norbert E Kaul


Heesemann, M., Grevemeyer, Ingo, Villinger, H. W., Contreras-Reyes, Eduardo, Scherwath, Martin, Völker, David and TIPTEQ Working Group, (2006) Thermal state of the seismogenic plate boundary in central Chile, 36-46°S [Poster] In: AGU Fall Meeting, 11.12.-15.12, San Francisco, California, USA. | 2006

Thermal state of the seismogenic plate boundary in central Chile, 36-46°S

Martin Heesemann; Ingo Grevemeyer; H. Villinger; Eduardo Contreras-Reyes; Martin Scherwath; David Völker


Heesemann, M., Villinger, H. and Grevemeyer, Ingo (2005) Heat-flux off coast Chile measured during RV Sonne cruise SO181-1b [Talk] In: Sonderkolloquium "Geotechnologien", GeoForschungsZentrum Potsdam, 09.-10.06.2005, Potsdam. | 2005

Heat-flux off coast Chile measured during RV Sonne cruise SO181-1b

Martin Heesemann; H. Villinger; Ingo Grevemeyer


Grevemeyer, Ingo, Flueh, Ernst R., Ranero, C. R., Klaeschen, Dirk and Villinger, H. (2004) Observational evidence for serpentinization of the uppermost mantle caused by bending-related normal faulting offshore Middle America [Poster] In: Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union, San Francisco. | 2004

Observational evidence for serpentinization of the uppermost mantle caused by bending-related normal faulting offshore Middle America

Ingo Grevemeyer; Ernst R. Flueh; César R. Ranero; Dirk Klaeschen; H. Villinger

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Bert Engelen

University of Oldenburg

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