Abstract

The difference in pressure between the sea floor and a point in the underlying sediment is an indicator of the velocity of pore-water flow. This differential pore pressure has now been measured at five sites using a free-fall piezometer (pop-up pore pressure instrument, PUPPI) in a distal turbidite province of the Madeira Abyssal Plain. We found that at one of the five sites the pressure was slightly positive, at two others it was effectively zero, but at the remaining two sites the pore pressure was significantly negative (−450 and −120 Pa at 4 m depth). The implication is that at these last two sites water is moving downwards at rates of 3.1 and 0.8 mm yr−1 (calculated using laboratory-measured hydraulic conductivities from core samples). If this downward movement is part of a hydrogeological system which includes upward movement of pore water elsewhere, there are obvious implications for schemes to dispose of highly radioactive waste by burial in deep-sea sediments.

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