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New research reveals that prehistoric seafloor pockmarks off the California coast are maintained by powerful sediment flows

New MBARI research on a field of pockmarks offshore of the Central California coast has revealed
the processes that maintain these large, circular depressions on the seafloor. Image: © 2019 MBARI

New research reveals that prehistoric seafloor pockmarks off the California coast are maintained by powerful sediment flows

New MBARI research on a field of pockmarks—large, circular depressions on the seafloor—offshore of Central California has revealed that powerful sediment flows, not methane gas eruptions, maintain these prehistoric formations. A team of researchers from MBARI, the United States Geological Survey (USGS), and Stanford University published their findings today in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface. This work provides important information to guide decision-making about responsible use and management of the seafloor off California, including site assessments for the development of offshore wind farms.

Located offshore of Central California, the Sur Pockmark Field contains more than 5,200 circular depressions. Image: Eve Lundsten © 2024 MBARI

The Sur Pockmark Field—an area about the size of the city of Los Angeles that is located off the coast of Big Sur, California—contains more than 5,200 circular depressions. These formations are approximately 200 meters (656 feet) across, roughly the distance of two football fields, and five meters (16 feet) deep. Past research in other parts of the world has suggested that similar large seafloor depressions were formed and maintained by methane gas bubbling up through the sediments. With wind farms slated for construction offshore of Central California, resource managers were concerned about how the presence of methane gas might impact the stability of the seafloor in this region.

The data collected by MBARI researchers and their collaborators found no evidence of methane at this site. Instead, the research team has proposed that sediment gravity flows—similar to an avalanche of mud, sand, and water moving along the seafloor—that have occurred in this region intermittently for hundreds of thousands of years maintain these seafloor formations.

“There are many unanswered questions about the seafloor and its processes,” said MBARI Senior Research Technician Eve Lundsten, who led this work. “This research provides important data about the seafloor for resource managers and others considering potential offshore sites for underwater infrastructure to guide their decision-making.”

Two MBARI engineers deploy a yellow torpedo-shaped underwater robot. The engineer on the left is wearing a black hard hat, a red jacket jacket, gray pants, and brown rubber boots. The engineer on the right is wearing a red hard hat, a red jacket with black sleevs, and tan pants. A white metal crane is positioned over the side of a research ship and is retrieving the robot from the ocean. The robot is dripping water. The background is gray-blue ocean and light-blue sky.
MBARI’s advanced underwater robots allowed researchers to map the Sur Pockmark Field and visualize the layers of sediment below some of the individual pockmarks. Image: Dave Caress © 2019 MBARI

The research team deployed MBARI’s advanced underwater robots to study the Sur Pockmark Field. First, autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs)—torpedo-shaped, self-guided robots—mapped the region. Previous maps of the seafloor were collected by sonar mounted on ships, but the distance between the ocean surface and the seafloor resulted in low-resolution data. AUVs can travel closer to the seafloor to visualize the terrain below in much greater detail. MBARI’s seafloor mapping AUVs also carried technology to profile the sub-bottom layers of sediment below the seafloor. These maps then guided sampling with MBARI’s remotely operated vehicle (ROV) Doc Ricketts. Operated by the research team in the control room aboard an MBARI research vessel, the ROV Doc Ricketts collected sediment samples to reconstruct the history of individual pockmarks. 

These pockmarks are located on the continental margin, a dynamic section of the seafloor that connects the relatively shallow continental shelf to the deep sea. Sediment gravity flows can move massive amounts of material through this region intermittently. The data and samples collected by MBARI technology helped the research team piece together the history of sediment movements over this part of the seafloor.

A researcher with brown shoulder-length hair in a ponytail wearing a white lab coat and white sneakers examines samples of brown mud. The four mud samples are laid out on pale-yellow trays lined with light-blue paper towels with a handwritten identification code on each. The trays are sitting on a black countertop with beige metal cabinets underneath.
Researchers examined sediment samples to reconstruct the history of individual pockmarks. Image: Eve Lundsten © 2018 MBARI

The team found multiple layers of sandy deposits, called turbidites, in the sediment samples taken from the pockmarks and the sub-bottom images of the pockmark field. These deposits indicated that large sediment gravity flows in the region have occurred intermittently for at least the last 280,000 years. These sediment gravity flows appear to cause erosion in the center of each pockmark, maintaining these unique underwater morphologic features over time.

“We collected a massive amount of data, allowing us to make a surprising link between pockmarks and sediment gravity flows. We were unable to determine exactly how these pockmarks were initially formed, but with MBARI’s advanced underwater technology, we’ve gained new insight into how and why these features have persisted on the seafloor for hundreds of thousands of years,” said Lundsten. 

Seafloor pockmarks have been found elsewhere around the world. In those locations, pockmarks have been associated with the release of methane gas or other fluids from the seafloor. Bubbling methane could potentially cause the seafloor to be unstable, which could pose risks for structures on the seafloor, like the anchors for offshore wind turbines. In October 2018, the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) announced areas offshore of Central California for potential wind energy leasing. MBARI quickly moved to conduct this research to answer critical questions about the stability of the seafloor to guide development of offshore wind energy in California.

“Expanding renewable energy is critical to achieving the dramatic cuts in carbon dioxide emissions needed to prevent further irreversible climate change. However, there are still many unanswered questions about the possible environmental impacts of offshore wind energy development,” said MBARI President and CEO Chris Scholin. “This research is one of many ways that MBARI researchers are answering fundamental questions about our ocean to help inform decisions about how we use marine resources.”

Because of the extensive efforts of MBARI, USGS, BOEM, and NOAA as part of the interagency Expanding Pacific Research and Exploration of Submerged Systems (EXPRESS) cooperative research campaign, the Sur Pockmark Field is now one of the best-studied areas of seafloor on the west coast of North America. However, there are still many questions to answer about these pockmarks, including how these features were initially formed hundreds of thousands of years ago.

Funding for this work was provided by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, BOEM, and USGS.

 

Background

Three MBARI researchers wearing white lab coats examine specimens of brown mud in the lab aboard an MBARI research ship. The researcher on the left has short curly hair. The researcher in the center has white hair and a white mustache. The researcher on the right has shoulder-length brown hair, is wearing light-blue latex gloves, and has sunglasses resting on her head. The two cylindrical mud samples are suspended from silver metal rods placed inside rectangular, white, plastic tubs. There is a variety of scientific equipment in the background.
MBARI’s Continental Margin Processes Team collaborated with researchers from USGS and Stanford University to better understand prehistoric pockmark formations on the seafloor offshore of Central California. Image courtesy of Nora Nieminski/USGS

The seafloor plays an important ecological and societal role. It provides vital habitat for marine life and supports our modern infrastructure. However, we still have a lot to learn about seafloor processes. MBARI has an active research program that uses advanced robots to study and map the seafloor offshore of Central California. MBARI’s Continental Margin Processes Team, led by Senior Scientist Charlie Paull, investigates how the morphology of the continental margin—where the continental shelf transitions to the abyssal plain—is sculpted and changed over time. 

The Sur Pockmark Field is located offshore of Big Sur, California, along the continental margin at a depth of 500 to 1,500 meters (approximately 1,600 to 5,200 feet). Some of these pockmarks were initially discovered by MBARI scientists in 1998 during a seafloor survey using ship-mounted multibeam sonar. Additional ship surveys conducted by MBARI collaborators at the USGS and NOAA in 2018 showed that the pockmarks extend southward into the region off Morro Bay. These surveys have revealed more than 5,200 pockmarks spread out over 1,300 square kilometers (500 square miles), making this area the largest known pockmark field in North America. 

The seafloor offshore of this remote stretch of the Central California coastline has historically been one of the least-studied regions of the continental margin off the west coast of North America. For the past six years, MBARI’s Continental Margin Processes Team has been working to understand the origins of the pockmark formations, establish whether they are geologically active, and determine if they are areas of special biological significance. 

Past research by MBARI, BOEM, and USGS examined the biological communities within the Sur Pockmark Field. This new research aimed to understand the geological processes that form and maintain pockmarks within the field.

The research team used mapping AUVs developed by engineers in MBARI’s Seafloor Mapping Lab to visualize a portion of the Sur Pockmark Field in greater detail.

An illustration shows a yellow torpedo-shaped underwater robot moving over a field of pockmarks using sound to visualize the seafloor bathymetry and the layers of sediment underneath. The color gradient on the seafloor bathymetry represents a depth gradient, with shallower depths in orange in the background transitioning to yellow, green, and blue in the foreground to represent deeper depths. The bathymetry includes approximately 16 circular pockmark formations. Underneath the bathymetry is a black-and-white cross-section of sediment layers showing deposits of coarse sediments in black.
MBARI’s mapping AUV collected bathymetry of the present-day seafloor of the Sur Pockmark Field. Acoustic technology on the AUV also allowed researchers to visualize the sediment layers underneath that were deposited over thousands of years. Illustration: Eve Lundsten © 2024 MBARI

Bathymetric surveys by these underwater robots mapped 317 of the 5,251 pockmarks at one-meter resolution. At this fine resolution, it became apparent the pockmarks have very smooth, gradually-sloped sides. The pockmarks are on average 156 meters (512 feet) across, nearly circular in shape, and fairly evenly spaced apart. Additionally, the AUVs were outfitted with a chirp sub-bottom profiler that uses sound to reveal layers of sediment below the seafloor surface. Chirp profiles captured portions of the subsurface below approximately 200 pockmarks at the site.

These surveys captured an assortment of detailed seafloor data that would not be visible from ship-based mapping with multibeam sonar. That data allowed targeted sampling of pockmarks within the field.

The Continental Margin Processes Team conducted 30 dives with two of MBARI’s ROVs to get a closer look at 21 pockmarks within the field. The team recorded 185 hours of seafloor video footage inside and adjacent to pockmarks. MBARI’s ROV Doc Ricketts also collected 107 vibracores—a 1.5-meter (five-foot) core of sediment dislodged into a metal tube by high-frequency vibrations—and 433 pushcores—a shallower 24-centimeter (9.4-inch) sample of sediment—within and around five pockmarks.

A USGS cruise on the research vessel M/V Bold Horizon in 2019 collected deeper piston and gravity cores up to 7.5 meters (25 feet) in length. The piston cores were taken inside pockmarks and at background sites adjacent to but outside of the pockmarks for comparison.

A scientific figure illustrates data from sediment cores taken in a pockmark formation. On the left are two thin vertical bars, the bar on the left shows a CT scan with wet bulk density in a color gradient, from blue to green to red. The thin vertical bar to the right shows alternating layers of light brown and dark grayish-brown sediment. The axis on the left is marked with the words JPC depth (cmbsf, centimeters below the seafloor) and 40-point increments from 180 at the top to 580 at the bottom. To the right of the two vertical bars is a jagged bright blue plot for density. At the top left is an axis marked with the words Density (g/cm3) and 0.4-point increments from 1.0 to 2.2. In the center is a section of this scanned core with a bright red bottom and bright green top and a section of the sediment core with dark gray sand at the bottom and pale brown sediment at the top. At the right is a smooth blue plot for density. At the top right is an axis marked with the words Density (g/cm3) and 0.4-point increments from 1.4 to 2.2. To the right is a key to the color gradient in the CT scan, with the color blue representing 1.2 grams per cubic centimeter, green representing 1.7 grams per cubic centimeter, and red representing 2.2 grams per cubic centimeter. At the bottom is an inset sub-bottom profile showing sediment below the seafloor in alternating layers of white and black. A vertical red line marks the location of the sediment cores on the left. A black arrow captioned with the word turbite indicates a turbite deposit. A scale box at the bottom indicates this inset represents 10 meters vertical and 20 meters.
Sediment cores collected throughout the pockmark field contained coarse, sandy deposits called turbidites (revealed in red by a CT scan on the left and clearly visible in the core photograph on the right), indicative of large sediment flows. These deposits correlate with the layers seen in the sub-bottom profiles (black-and-white inset) collected by MBARI’s mapping robots, suggesting massive layers of sand have occasionally blanketed the entire Sur Pockmark Field. Image: Eve Lundsten © 2024 MBARI

Importantly, the research team found no evidence of methane gas in any of the samples or data that they collected. Instead, the subsurface profiles and sediment samples indicated that the pockmarks contain alternating layers of fine and coarse sediment. 

The sandy deposits, or turbidites, were the key to unlocking the surprising story of massive sediment gravity flows passing over the whole area. Fine sediment on the seafloor was deposited slowly over time, then intermittent large sediment gravity flows left a characteristic layer of coarse sand. It appears these flows erode the pockmark centers, leaving behind sandy deposits across multiple pockmarks in the region at the same time.

Scientists have only recently begun to understand the patterns of erosion and deposition by sediment gravity flows in underwater canyons and channels. The Sur Pockmark Field is bordered by two channels—the Lucia Chica Channel to the north and the San Simeon Channel to the south—but is otherwise broad and open terrain.

Exactly how currents and sediments move over the dimpled surface of the Sur Pockmark Field is still unknown. However, the research team has proposed the unique seafloor morphology in this area may create flow patterns that erode the pockmark centers. In this region, sediment gravity flows are episodic, occurring tens of thousands of years apart. The last one was approximately 14,000 years ago. Computer modeling will be required to confirm if an unconfined flow passing over the pockmark field carries sufficient energy to erode and maintain the pockmarks.


Research Publication:

Lundsten, E., C.K. Paull, R. Gwiazda, S. Dobbs, D.W. Caress, L.A. Kuhnz, M. Walton, N. Nieminski, M. McGann, T. Lorenson, G. Cochrane, and J. Addison. 2024. Pockmarks offshore Big Sur, California provide evidence for recurrent, regional, and unconfined sediment gravity flows. Journal of Geophysical Research, Earth Surface. 129, e2023JF007374. doi.org/10.1029/2023JF007374 


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