Abstract

AbstractThe International Ocean Discovery Program cored Sites U1517 (Tuaheni landslide) and U1519 (Tuaheni Basin) on the Hikurangi slope, North Island, New Zealand. We employed X‐ray diffraction to document clay mineral assemblages within the muddy sediments, with the aim of testing their potential influences on slope stability. Detrital smectite dominates the clays, with average proportions of 52 wt% at Site U1517 and 53 wt% at Site U1519. Bulk sediment from Site U1517 contains up to ∼29 wt% smectite (average = 21 wt%), high enough to reduce the angle of internal friction (on average) to ∼6°. Stratigraphic sections at both sites are homogeneous; compositional excursions are not evident along inferred slip surfaces or weak layers. Smectite decreases in the “downstream” direction of the East Cape Current, and that spatial trend correlates with lower densities of slide scars. The uniformity of compositional preconditioning, however, points to other factors as determinants of slip nucleation.

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