Abstract

We discovered a large field of cylindrically-shaped sediment chimneys at the seafloor along the flank of Farnella Canyon (water depth ∼2775 m) at the base of the Sigsbee Escarpment in the northwestern Gulf of Mexico. The chimneys are about 10 cm in diameter with 1 cm wide axial cavities; they rise about 0.5–1 m above the seafloor and continue down into the seabed. Their composition and fabric were characterized using X-ray diffraction, carbonate content, stable oxygen and carbon isotopes, and scanning electron microscopy and microanalysis. Seismic profiles and bathymetric data from the location were analyzed to seek links between the chimneys and seabed geological structures. Results indicate that the vented liquids were warm seawater with brine and there is no evidence of hydrocarbons. These chimneys are residual sediment-filled fluid-escape conduits formed in the seabed from hemipelagic sediments that were locally consolidated by the pressure of fluid moving upward through the seabed in adjacent conduits and bound together by iron oxide and amorphous silica precipitates, as well as authigenic dolomite. The chimneys were subsequently exposed at the seafloor when bottom currents eroded the surrounding seabed. Concentric and crosscut bands evident in chimney cross sections indicate venting occurred episodically (venting is not currently active). The chimney field is situated at the toe of the Jurassic salt massif that extends beneath much of the continental slope. Salt movement created a pressure gradient within the seabed, directing porewater flow toward the base of the slope where the chimneys occur; thus, venting most likely occurred during times of salt mobility and shortly thereafter.

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