Masato Makio
Kyushu University
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Featured researches published by Masato Makio.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2015
Masahiko Sato; Masato Makio; Tatsuya Hayashi; Masao Ohno
Knowledge of the evolution of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) is key to understanding the past evolution of the climatic system. Here we developed a new rock-magnetic method to determine the constituent magnetic minerals of sediments and report on the evolution of NADW during 2.2–2.9 Ma. We measured isothermal remanence acquisition curves of North Atlantic deep-sea sediments drilled at the Gardar Drift and decomposed the first derivatives of these curves into high-coercivity and low-coercivity components. Residuals of the decomposition were sufficiently small throughout the study interval, confirming that the Gardar Drift sediments represent a mixing of the two end-members. Fractional changes of the high-coercivity component represent variation of the Iceland-Scotland Overflow Water, a branch of NADW formed at the Nordic Seas. The high-coercivity component increased significantly during an interglacial period just after ~2.68 Ma, which suggests that NADW formation in the Nordic Seas abruptly intensified at this time.
Earth, Planets and Space | 2017
Shogo Komori; Yuka Masaki; Wataru Tanikawa; Junji Torimoto; Yusuke Ohta; Masato Makio; Lena Maeda; Jun-ichiro Ishibashi; Tatsuo Nozaki; Osamu Tadai; Hidenori Kumagai
Submarine hydrothermal deposits are one of the promising seafloor mineral resources, because they can store a large amount of metallic minerals as sulfides. The present study focuses on the electrical properties of active modern submarine hydrothermal deposits, in order to provide constraints on the interpretation of electrical structures obtained from marine electromagnetic surveys. Measurements of resistivity and spectral induced polarization (IP) were made using drillcore samples taken from the Iheya North Knoll and the Iheya Minor Ridge in Okinawa Trough, Japan. These hydrothermal sediments are dominantly composed of disseminated sulfides, with minor amounts of massive sulfide rocks. The depth profiles of resistivity and spectral IP properties were successfully revealed to correspond well to layer-by-layer lithological features. Comparison with other physical properties and occurrence of constituent minerals showed that resistivity is essentially sensitive to the connectivity of interstitial fluids, rather than by sulfide and clay content. This suggests that, in active modern submarine hydrothermal systems, not only typical massive sulfide rocks but also high-temperature hydrothermal fluids could be imaged as low-resistivity anomalies in seabed surveys. The spectral IP signature was shown to be sensitive to the presence or absence of sulfide minerals, and total chargeability is positively correlated with sulfide mineral abundance. In addition, the massive sulfide rock exhibits the distinctive IP feature that the phase steadily increases with a decrease of frequency. These results show the effective usage of IP for developing and improving marine IP exploration techniques.Graphical abstract.
Applied Geochemistry | 2014
Yoshihiro Kuwahara; Masato Makio
Minerals | 2016
Yoshihiro Kuwahara; Wen Liu; Masato Makio; Keisuke Otsuka
Journal of Mineralogical and Petrological Sciences | 2013
Hirotsugu Nishido; Masato Makio; Nobuhiro Kusano; Kiyotaka Ninagawa
Microchemical Journal | 2018
Nguyen Van Thinh; Yasuhito Osanai; Tatsuro Adachi; Phong K. Thai; Nobuhiko Nakano; Akinori Ozaki; Yoshihiro Kuwahara; Ryosuke Kato; Masato Makio; Kiyoshi Kurosawa
Japan Geoscience Union | 2017
Masato Makio; Masahiko Sato; Tatsuya Hayashi; Masao Ohno; Yoshihiro Kuwahara
Japan Geoscience Union | 2017
Wen Liu; Yoshihiro Kuwahara; Keisuke Ootsuka; Masato Makio
Japan Geoscience Union | 2017
Shogo Komori; Yuka Masaki; Wataru Tanikawa; Junji Torimoto; Yusuke Ota; Masato Makio; Lena Maeda; Jun-ichiro Ishibashi; Tatsuo Nozaki; Osamu Tadai; Hidenori Kumagai; Ck on-board member
Supplement to: Sato, M et al. (2015): Abrupt intensification of North Atlantic Deep Water formation at the Nordic Seas during the late Pliocene climate transition. Geophysical Research Letters, 42(12), 4949-4955, https://doi.org/10.1002/2015GL063307 | 2015
Masahiko Sato; Masato Makio; Tatsuya Hayashi; Masao Ohno
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National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
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