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Dive into the research topics where K. S. V. Subramanyam is active.

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Featured researches published by K. S. V. Subramanyam.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2012

Heat flow in the Lesser Antilles island arc and adjacent back arc Grenada basin

Michael Manga; Matthew J. Hornbach; Anne Le Friant; Osamu Ishizuka; Nicole A. Stroncik; Tatsuya Adachi; Mohammed Aljahdali; Georges Boudon; Christoph Breitkreuz; Andrew Fraass; Akihiko Fujinawa; Robert G. Hatfield; Martin Jutzeler; Kyoko S. Kataoka; Sara Lafuerza; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Martinez-Colon; Molly McCanta; Sally Morgan; Martin R. Palmer; Takeshi Saito; Angela L. Slagle; Adam J. Stinton; K. S. V. Subramanyam; Yoshihiko Tamura; Peter J. Talling; Benoît Villemant; Deborah Wall-Palmer; Fei Wang

Using temperature gradients measured in 10 holes at 6 sites, we generate the first high fidelity heat flow measurements from Integrated Ocean Drilling Program drill holes across the northern and central Lesser Antilles arc and back arc Grenada basin. The implied heat flow, after correcting for bathymetry and sedimentation effects, ranges from about 0.1 W/m2 on the crest of the arc, midway between the volcanic islands of Montserrat and Guadeloupe, to 15 km from the crest in the back arc direction. Combined with previous measurements, we find that the magnitude and spatial pattern of heat flow are similar to those at continental arcs. The heat flow in the Grenada basin to the west of the active arc is 0.06 W/m2, a factor of 2 lower than that found in the previous and most recent study. There is no thermal evidence for significant shallow fluid advection at any of these sites. Present-day volcanism is confined to the region with the highest heat flow.


Science & Engineering Faculty | 2015

Submarine record of volcanic island construction and collapse in the Lesser Antilles arc: First scientific drilling of submarine volcanic island landslides by IODP Expedition 340

A. Le Friant; Osamu Ishizuka; Georges Boudon; Martin R. Palmer; Peter J. Talling; B. Villemant; Tatsuya Adachi; Mohammed Aljahdali; Christoph Breitkreuz; Morgane Brunet; Benoit Caron; Maya Coussens; Christine Deplus; Daisuke Endo; Nathalie Feuillet; A.J. Fraas; Akihiko Fujinawa; Malcolm B. Hart; Robert G. Hatfield; Matt Hornbach; Martin Jutzeler; Kyoko S. Kataoka; J-C. Komorowski; Elodie Lebas; Sara Lafuerza; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Manga; Michael Martinez-Colon; Molly McCanta; Sally Morgan

IODP Expedition 340 successfully drilled a series of sites offshore Montserrat, Martinique and Dominica in the Lesser Antilles from March to April 2012. These are among the few drill sites gathered around volcanic islands, and the first scientific drilling of large and likely tsunamigenic volcanic island-arc landslide deposits. These cores provide evidence and tests of previous hypotheses for the composition and origin of those deposits. Sites U1394, U1399, and U1400 that penetrated landslide deposits recovered exclusively seafloor sediment, comprising mainly turbidites and hemipelagic deposits, and lacked debris avalanche deposits. This supports the concepts that i/ volcanic debris avalanches tend to stop at the slope break, and ii/ widespread and voluminous failures of preexisting low-gradient seafloor sediment can be triggered by initial emplacement of material from the volcano. Offshore Martinique (U1399 and 1400), the landslide deposits comprised blocks of parallel strata that were tilted or microfaulted, sometimes separated by intervals of homogenized sediment (intense shearing), while Site U1394 offshore Montserrat penetrated a flat-lying block of intact strata. The most likely mechanism for generating these large-scale seafloor sediment failures appears to be propagation of a decollement from proximal areas loaded and incised by a volcanic debris avalanche. These results have implications for the magnitude of tsunami generation. Under some conditions, volcanic island landslide deposits composed of mainly seafloor sediment will tend to form smaller magnitude tsunamis than equivalent volumes of subaerial block-rich mass flows rapidly entering water. Expedition 340 also successfully drilled sites to access the undisturbed record of eruption fallout layers intercalated with marine sediment which provide an outstanding high-resolution data set to analyze eruption and landslides cycles, improve understanding of magmatic evolution as well as offshore sedimentation processes.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2014

Late Pleistocene stratigraphy of IODP Site U1396 and compiled chronology offshore of south and south west Montserrat, Lesser Antilles

Deborah Wall-Palmer; Maya Coussens; Peter J. Talling; Martin Jutzeler; Michael Cassidy; Isabelle Marchant; Martin R. Palmer; S.F.L. Watt; Christopher W. Smart; Jodie K. Fisher; Malcolm B. Hart; Andrew Fraass; J. Trofimovs; Anne Le Friant; Osamu Ishizuka; Tatsuya Adachi; Mohammed Aljahdali; Georges Boudon; Christoph Breitkreuz; Daisuke Endo; Akihiko Fujinawa; Robert G. Hatfield; Matthew J. Hornbach; Kyoko S. Kataoka; Sara Lafuerza; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Manga; Michael Martinez-Colon; Molly McCanta; Sally Morgan

Marine sediments around volcanic islands contain an archive of volcaniclastic deposits, which can be used to reconstruct the volcanic history of an area. Such records hold many advantages over often incomplete terrestrial data sets. This includes the potential for precise and continuous dating of intervening sediment packages, which allow a correlatable and temporally constrained stratigraphic framework to be constructed across multiple marine sediment cores. Here we discuss a marine record of eruptive and mass-wasting events spanning ∼250 ka offshore of Montserrat, using new data from IODP Expedition 340, as well as previously collected cores. By using a combination of high-resolution oxygen isotope stratigraphy, AMS radiocarbon dating, biostratigraphy of foraminifera and calcareous nannofossils, and clast componentry, we identify five major events at Soufriere Hills volcano since 250 ka. Lateral correlations of these events across sediment cores collected offshore of the south and south west of Montserrat have improved our understanding of the timing, extent and associations between events in this area. Correlations reveal that powerful and potentially erosive density-currents traveled at least 33 km offshore and demonstrate that marine deposits, produced by eruption-fed and mass-wasting events on volcanic islands, are heterogeneous in their spatial distribution. Thus, multiple drilling/coring sites are needed to reconstruct the full chronostratigraphy of volcanic islands. This multidisciplinary study will be vital to interpreting the chaotic records of submarine landslides at other sites drilled during Expedition 340 and provides a framework that can be applied to the stratigraphic analysis of sediments surrounding other volcanic islands.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Permeability and pressure measurements in Lesser Antilles submarine slides: Evidence for pressure-driven slow-slip failure

Matthew J. Hornbach; Michael Manga; Michael Genecov; Robert Valdez; Peter Miller; Demian M. Saffer; Esther Adelstein; Sara Lafuerza; Tatsuya Adachi; Christoph Breitkreuz; Martin Jutzeler; Anne Le Friant; Osamu Ishizuka; Sally Morgan; Angela L. Slagle; Peter J. Talling; Andrew Fraass; S.F.L. Watt; Nicole A. Stroncik; Mohammed Aljahdali; Georges Boudon; Akihiko Fujinawa; Robert G. Hatfield; Kyoko S. Kataoka; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Martinez-Colon; Molly McCanta; Martin R. Palmer; Adam J. Stinton; K. S. V. Subramanyam

Recent studies hypothesize that some submarine slides fail via pressure-driven slow-slip deformation. To test this hypothesis, this study derives pore pressures in failed and adjacent unfailed deep marine sediments by integrating rock physics models, physical property measurements on recovered sediment core, and wireline logs. Two drill sites (U1394 and U1399) drilled through interpreted slide debris; a third (U1395) drilled into normal marine sediment. Near-hydrostatic fluid pressure exists in sediments at site U1395. In contrast, results at both sites U1394 and U1399 indicate elevated pore fluid pressures in some sediment. We suggest that high pore pressure at the base of a submarine slide deposit at site U1394 results from slide shearing. High pore pressure exists throughout much of site U1399, and Mohr circle analysis suggests that only slight changes in the stress regime will trigger motion. Consolidation tests and permeability measurements indicate moderately low (~10−16–10−17 m2) permeability and overconsolidation in fine-grained slide debris, implying that these sediments act as seals. Three mechanisms, in isolation or in combination, may produce the observed elevated pore fluid pressures at site U1399: (1) rapid sedimentation, (2) lateral fluid flow, and (3) shearing that causes sediments to contract, increasing pore pressure. Our preferred hypothesis is this third mechanism because it explains both elevated fluid pressure and sediment overconsolidation without requiring high sedimentation rates. Our combined analysis of subsurface pore pressures, drilling data, and regional seismic images indicates that slope failure offshore Martinique is perhaps an ongoing, creep-like process where small stress changes trigger motion.


Archive | 2012

Lesser Antilles volcanism and landslides: implications for hazard assessment and long-term magmatic evolution of the arc

A. Le Friant; Osamu Ishizuka; Nicole A. Stroncik; Angela L. Slagle; Sally Morgan; Tatsuya Adachi; Mohammed Aljahdali; Georges Boudon; Christoph Breitkreuz; Daisuke Endo; Andrew Fraass; Akihiko Fujinawa; Robert G. Hatfield; Matt Hornbach; Martin Jutzeler; Kyoko S. Kataoka; Sl Colas; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Manga; Michael Martinez-Colon; Molly McCanta; J McManus; Palmer; Takeshi Saito; Adam J. Stinton; K. S. V. Subramanyam; Peter J. Talling; Yoshihiko Tamura; B. Villemant; Deborah Wall-Palmer


Proceedings of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program | 2016

Synthesis: stratigraphy and age control for IODP Sites U1394, U1395, and U1396 offshore Montserrat in the Lesser Antilles

Maya Coussens; Deborah Wall-Palmer; Peter J. Talling; S.F.L. Watt; Stuart J. Hatter; Michael Cassidy; Michael A. Clare; Martin Jutzeler; Robert G. Hatfield; Molly McCanta; Kyoko S. Kataoka; Daisuke Endo; Martin R. Palmer; Adam J. Stinton; Akihiko Fujinawa; Georges Boudon; A. Le Friant; Osamu Ishizuka; Thomas M. Gernon; Tatsuya Adachi; Mohammed Aljahdali; Christoph Breitkreuz; A.J. Frass; Matt Hornbach; Elodie Lebas; Sara Lafuerza; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Manga; Michael Martinez-Colon; James McManus


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Permeability and pressure measurements in Lesser Antilles submarine slides: Evidence for pressure-driven slow-slip failure: PRESSURE-DRIVEN SLOW-SLIP FAILURE

Matthew J. Hornbach; Michael Manga; Michael Genecov; Robert Valdez; Peter Miller; Demian M. Saffer; Esther Adelstein; Sara Lafuerza; Tatsuya Adachi; Christoph Breitkreuz; Martin Jutzeler; Anne Le Friant; Osamu Ishizuka; Sally Morgan; Angela L. Slagle; Peter J. Talling; Andrew Fraass; S.F.L. Watt; Nicole A. Stroncik; Mohammed Aljahdali; Georges Boudon; Akihiko Fujinawa; Robert G. Hatfield; Kyoko S. Kataoka; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Martinez-Colon; Molly McCanta; Martin R. Palmer; Adam J. Stinton; K. S. V. Subramanyam


Archive | 2014

Late Pleistocene stratigraphy of IODP Site U1396 and compiled chronology offshore of south and south west Montserrat

Lesser Antilles; Deborah Wall-Palmer; Maya Coussens; Peter J. Talling; Martin Jutzeler; Michael Cassidy; Isabelle Marchant; Martin R. Palmer; S.F.L. Watt; Christopher W. Smart; Jodie K. Fisher; Malcolm B. Hart; Andrew Fraass; J. Trofimovs; Anne Le Friant; Osamu Ishizuka; Tatsuya Adachi; Mohammed Aljahdali; Georges Boudon; Christoph Breitkreuz; Daisuke Endo; Akihiko Fujinawa; Robert G. Hatfield; Matthew J. Hornbach; Kyoko S. Kataoka; Sara Lafuerza; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Manga; Michael Martinez-Colon; Molly McCanta


Proceedings of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program | 2013

Expedition 340 summary

A LeFriant; Osamu Ishizuka; Nicole A. Stroncik; Angela L. Slagle; Sally Morgan; Tatsuya Adachi; Mohammed Aljahdali; Georges Boudon; Christoph Breitkreuz; Daisuke Endo; Andrew Fraass; Akihiko Fujinawa; R.G. Hatfield; Martin Jutzeler; Kyoko S. Kataoka; Sara Lafuerza; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Manga; Michael Martinez-Colon; Molly McCanta; J McManus; Palmer; Takeshi Saito; Adam J. Stinton; K. S. V. Subramanyam; Peter J. Talling; Yoshihiko Tamura; B. Villemant; Deborah Wall-Palmer; Fuhui Wang


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2012

Heat flow in the Lesser Antilles island arc and adjacent back arc Grenada basin: HEAT FLOW IN THE LESSER ANTILLES ARC

Michael Manga; Matthew J. Hornbach; Anne Le Friant; Osamu Ishizuka; Nicole A. Stroncik; Tatsuya Adachi; Mohammed Aljahdali; Georges Boudon; Christoph Breitkreuz; Andrew Fraass; Akihiko Fujinawa; Robert G. Hatfield; Martin Jutzeler; Kyoko S. Kataoka; Sara Lafuerza; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Martinez-Colon; Molly McCanta; Sally Morgan; Martin R. Palmer; Takeshi Saito; Angela L. Slagle; Adam J. Stinton; K. S. V. Subramanyam; Yoshihiko Tamura; Peter J. Talling; Benoît Villemant; Deborah Wall-Palmer; Fei Wang

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Michael Manga

University of California

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Michael Martinez-Colon

University of South Florida St. Petersburg

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Christoph Breitkreuz

Freiberg University of Mining and Technology

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