28 January, 2004
For Sam Mukasa and Jill Van Tongeren from the University of Michigan it
was a good day to catch up on some back work. Earlier in the cruise Sam
and Jill with the help of many of the scientists, marine staff and crew
had collected rock samples at Franklin Island. Over the past couple of
days Sam had been looking over the collection formalizing a method to
catalog each sample so that when he returned to Michigan he would have
an inventory of the location and geologic feature where each sample was
taken.
Sam had washed all of the rock samples that he had collected and Jill
was about to begin washing all of those that she had taken. As we
talked, he and Jill labeled each sample with paint pen and permanent
marker with an alphanumeric label. Each sample was then placed in a
canvas bag, with the identification written directly on the bag and on
a tag attached to the bag.
Sam recounted a story about some rock samples that had been collected
by many geologists in many areas over many years that had been mixed
together as the result of an earthquake in California. The samples had
been placed in bags, but the rocks had not been labeled directly.
During the course of the quake, the shelves that the rocks had been
stored on broke and the samples all came crashing to the floor. This
would not have been a problem, but the samples were collected over so
many years that most of the collection bags were old and brittle and
broke when the samples hit the floor. When the geologists began
attempted to reorganize and identify the samples, they could not. They
were left with a pile of interesting rocks.
In addition to the collection bags and direct labels, Sam and Jill had
also recorded information about each sample in a field journal, and
many of the more unusual samples were photographed as well.
When they get the samples back to Michigan, they will make thin
sections of the rocks to look at their structure under the microscope.
Their emphasis will be on looking at the chemical composition of the
rocks looking in parcticular at trace radioisotopes that will help them
to date the age of the rocks. From this isotope data they can age the
flows from which they samples were originally taken, producing a
timeline for the volcanic events that formed Franklin Island. They will
be very interested in the magma nodules. These nodules contain crystals
that are formed by minerals that cool more rapidly than the surrounding
rock. The most common mineral that they will find is Olivine. If the
nodules that are exposed to the elements the Olivine will be weathered.
Weathering changes the chemistry of the rock and reducing the
reliability of the isotope dating from those nodules. They will try to
locate "fresh" nodules as they make their cross sections to provide
them with unaltered crystals for their analysis.
We continue to do multibeam surveys of the area around Franklin Island
looking for potential volcanic formations. Some of the initial data
looks promising. Efforts are being made to improve the data being
collection and analysis for the seismic streamer.