Abstract

We investigated a mud volcano (MV) in a fault zone located at the southern edge of the Kumano Basin, the largest forearc basin along the Nankai Trough. Existing seismic sections show a truncated bottom-simulating reflection by a conduit below a topographic high, indicating the presence of an MV. New shipboard acoustic observations show that the fluid may be seeping through the seafloor, which in turn indicates that there are sufficient fluids for larger scale fluid migration in this area. Autonomous underwater vehicle-based high resolution acoustic observations and pH measurements indicate that soft sediment covers most of the MV and surrounding seafloor and that mud and small amounts of “high-backscattered materials” are sprinkled within the crater and around the MV. The MV type is different from those in the landward part of the Kumano Basin: the southern MV is smaller in size, has a steeper slope angle than the those in the northern Kumano Basin, and is located in a fault zone. The characteristics of this 14th Kumano Basin MV suggest that it is an expression of the larger scale fluid and sediment migration along the southern edge of the Kumano Basin, which may provide information regarding fluid and sediment migration along fault systems in the Nankai Trough accretionary prism.

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