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Home » Discovery » First Riser-Drilling Research Operations Undertaken in Earthquake Zone

First Riser-Drilling Research Operations Undertaken in Earthquake Zone

Posted by Will Ramos on Monday, June 29th, 2009 at 3:07 pm
Filed under: Discovery, Integrated Ocean Drilling Program, News & Resources, Scientific Ocean Drilling
chikyu-ship-01

(Click image to enlarge) The deepsea drilling vessel CHIKYU

From the  Integrated Ocean Drilling Program

YOKOHAMA, JAPAN -- 06/29/09 -- Approximately 58 km southeast of Shingu City, Japan -- Deepsea Drilling Vessel CHIKYU has resumed IODP drilling operations in the Nankai Trough Seismogenic Zone off the Kii Peninsula of Japan. The scientific drilling expedition's first target is located in water depths of 2,054 meters. Following sea floor surveys, the crew began fitting riser pipe and a blow-out prevention (BOP) system into an upper section of the first borehole to be drilled. The riser pipe and BOP (the blow-out preventer) was successfully connected to the wellhead. After testing the circulation of the drilling fluid, the first riser-drilling operations for CHIKYU in the history of scientific ocean drilling began. The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) chronicled the lead-in to this historic activity, the first media organization outside Japan to broadcast live from aboard CHIKYU.

The target drilling depth at the first borehole is 1,600 meters below the seafloor. Following drilling operations, vertical seismic profiling (VSP) is expected to begin as part of geophysical logging.

Riser-drilling involves a large marine riser pipe that connects the CHIKYU to the seafloor. The riser pipe guides the drill pipe as it reenters the well. Drilling fluid is pumped up and down between the riser pipe and the drill pipe. Fluid circulation and use of the blow-out preventer (BOP) help to maintain pressure balance within the borehole and prevent it from collapsing, enabling safer and deeper drilling.

(Click to enlarge)

(Click image to enlarge)

CHIKYU is the world's first scientific drilling vessel capable of riser-drilling deep beneath the ocean floor and in seismogenic (earthquake-producing) zones that have never been reached before.

The Nankai Trough subduction zone, located southwest of Japan, is one of the most active earthquake zones on the planet, with complex geological formations caused by tectonic plate thrusts. The scheduled drill site, the Kumano Basin, is a fore-arc basin of the Nankai Trough under the influence of the strong Kuroshio ocean current. In combination with inclement weather expected, due to passing typhoons, and riser-drilling down to depths of more than 2,000 meters below surface, this phase of NanTroSEIZE is considered one of the most challenging tasks in ocean-drilling history.

The average speed of the Kuroshio current in the surveyed area is about 1.0 knots, relatively slow for the current speed usually observed in the Kumano Basin. Yet, fairings are to be mounted onto a riser pipe to smooth the hydrodynamic flow behind the riser pipe (to reduce riser drag) and suppress the vortex-induced vibration under high current conditions. The motion of the riser also will be monitored for analysis, in order to use the results in future operations.

Editorial Notes:

*1 IODP (Integrated Ocean Drilling Program)

The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) is an international marine research drilling program dedicated to advancing scientific understanding of Earth by monitoring, sampling, and instrumenting subseafloor environments. Through multiple platforms, preeminent scientists explore IODP principal themes: the deep biosphere, environmental change, and solid Earth cycles. IODP has operated since October 2003, funded jointly by the Japan Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology and the U.S. National Science Foundation; with additional support provided by the European Consortium of Ocean Research Drilling; the People's Republic of China, the Republic of Korea, Australia, India, and New Zealand.

*2 VSP (Vertical Seismic Profiling)

Vertical Seismic Profiling is a technique to obtain information on geological formations of plate boundaries and accretionary prisms with a great precision. It involves some 20 seismometers being lowered from the CHIKYU into the borehole, toward which elastic waves are fired from an air gun towered by the JAMSTEC's research vessel "KAIREI."

Image Available: http://www2.marketwire.com/mw/frame_mw?attachid=1012515
Image Available: http://www2.marketwire.com/mw/frame_mw?attachid=1012525
Image Available: http://www2.marketwire.com/mw/frame_mw?attachid=1012528
Image Available: http://www2.marketwire.com/mw/frame_mw?attachid=1012531

Contacts:

Takeo Tanaka
Email Contact
Center for Deep Earth Exploration (CDEX)
Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC)

Noriyuki Murata
Email Contact
Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

Nancy Light
Email Contact
Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International


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