Quartz arenites of the Cambro-Ordovician Kamouraska Formation, Quebec Appalachians, Canada: I. Deep-water depositional processes in a continental-slope environment

2011 ◽  
Vol 48 (8) ◽  
pp. 1209-1231 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Malhame ◽  
Reinhard Hesse

The Kamouraska Formation is an uppermost Cambrian – lowermost Ordovician quartz-arenite-dominated unit of controversial origin deposited on the southeastern slope of Laurentia bordering the Iapetus Ocean. It is exposed in the Quebec Appalachians on the south shore of the St. Lawrence Estuary. The formation consists of basal polymictic conglomerate and overlying massive sheet-like quartz arenite. The conglomerate beds are reversely and reversely to normally graded. The quartz arenite beds are generally massive, although they may show coarse-tail grading. Beds containing full or partial Bouma sequences are rare. Paleoflow directions from ripple-cross lamination, ripple marks on bed surfaces, and sole marks point towards southeast, south, and southwest. The clastic sediments of the Kamouraska were transported into the deep sea by sediment gravity flows that evolved from hyperconcentrated to concentrated density flows, and then to turbidity currents. The depositional environment is interpreted to have been a southwest-trending meandering submarine canyon. The exposed part of the canyon deposits is slightly oblique to the strike of slope. If correct, our interpretation establishes the preservation of continental-slope deposits in more distal deep-water siliciclastic sedimentary rocks of the Taconian orogen in Quebec, which traditionally have been interpreted as submarine-fan and (or) basin-plain deposits. The orientation of a canyon near parallel-to strike of the slope may have been controlled by syn-depositional growth faults. The coarsest hyperconcentrated flows, which deposited the conglomerate, were restricted to the deepest parts of the canyon during its early stages of development, whereas the concentrated density flows that deposited the massive quartz-arenite beds covered a wider area.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nan Wu ◽  
Harya Nugraha ◽  
Michael Steventon ◽  
Fa Zhong

The architecture of canyon-fills can provide a valuable record of the link between tectonics, sedimentation, and depositional processes in submarine settings. We integrate 3D and 2D seismic reflection data to investigate the dominant tectonics and sedimentary processes involved in the formation of two deeply buried (c. 500 m below seafloor), and large (c. 3-6 km wide, >35 km long) Late Miocene submarine canyons. We found the plate tectonic-scale events (i.e. continental breakup and shortening) have a first-order influence on the submarine canyon initiation and evolution. Initially, the Late Cretaceous (c. 65 Ma) separation of Australia and Antarctica resulted in extensional fault systems, which then formed stair-shaped paleo-seabed. This inherited seabed topography allowed gravity-driven processes (i.e. turbidity currents and mass-transport complexes) to occur. Subsequently, the Late Miocene (c. 5 Ma) collision of Australia and Eurasia, and the resulting uplift and exhumation, have resulted in a prominent unconformity surface that coincides with the base of the canyons. We suggest that the Late Miocene intensive tectonics and associated seismicity have resulted in instability in the upper slope that consequently gave rise to emplacement of MTCs, initiating the canyons formation. Therefore, we indicate that regional tectonics play a key role in the initiation and development of submarine canyons.


2020 ◽  
Vol 90 (12) ◽  
pp. 1678-1705
Author(s):  
Kévin Boulesteix ◽  
Miquel Poyatos-Moré ◽  
David M. Hodgson ◽  
Stephen S. Flint ◽  
Kevin G. Taylor

ABSTRACT Mud dominates volumetrically the fraction of sediment delivered and deposited in deep-water environments, and mudstone is a major component of basin-floor successions. However, studies of basin-floor deposits have mainly focused on their proximal sandstone-prone part. A consequent bias therefore remains in the understanding of depositional processes and stratigraphic architecture in mudstone-prone distal settings beyond the sandstone pinchouts of basin-floor fans. This study uses macroscopic and microscopic descriptions of over 500 m of continuous cores from research boreholes from the Permian Skoorsteenberg Formation of the Karoo Basin, South Africa, to document the sedimentology, stratigraphy, and ichnology of a distal mudstone-prone basin-floor succession. Very thin- to thin-bedded mudstones, deposited by low-density turbidity currents, stack to form bedsets bounded by thin packages (< 0.7 m thick) of background mudstones. Genetically related bedsets stack to form bedset packages, which are bounded by thicker (> 0.7 m thick) background mudstones. Stratigraphic correlation between cores suggests that bedsets represent the distal fringes of submarine fan lobe elements and/or lobes, and bedset packages represent the distal fringes of lobe complexes and/or lobe complex sets. The internal stacking pattern of bedsets and bedset packages is highly variable vertically and laterally, which records dominantly autogenic processes (e.g., compensational stacking, avulsion of feeder channels). The background mudstones are characterized by remnant tractional structures and outsize particles, and are interpreted as deposited from low-density turbidity currents and debris flows before intense biogenic reworking. These observations challenge the idea that mud accumulates only from hemipelagic suspension fallout in distal basin-floor environments. Thin background mudstones separating bedsets (< 0.7 m thick) are interpreted to mainly represent autogenically driven lobe abandonment due to up-dip channel avulsion. The thicker background mudstones separating bedset packages (> 0.7 m thick) are interpreted to dominantly mark allogenically driven regional decrease of sand supply to the basin floor. The recognition of sandstone-prone basin-floor fans passing into genetically linked distal fringe mudstones suggests that submarine lobes are at least ∼ 20 km longer than previously estimated. This study provides sedimentological, stratigraphic, and ichnological criteria to differentiate mudstones deposited in different sub-environments in distal deep-water basin-floor settings, with implications for the accurate characterization of basin-floor fan architecture, and their use as archives of paleoenvironmental change.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Wilkin

<p>Results are presented from the current experimental campaign which aims to observe the character of supercritical turbidity currents and other supercritical sediment gravity flows (SGFs) as they respond to morphological transition zones, e.g. slope breaks and losses of lateral confinement. This experimental setup aims to reproduce lower slope, channel-lobe transition zone, and, proximal lobe conditions, in order to be analogous to conditions found within deep-marine sedimentary environments such as those found within foreland basins, and on passive margins. Of particular interest is the sedimentological expression of these systems, how sedimentological variability arises in the form of sediment waves and scour fields, and how does an understanding of current dynamics help in the prediction of the internal structures of these features. Thus, this study will yield new data on how turbidity currents impact multi-layered sedimentary beds and determine parametric controls on erosion, deposition and bed restructuring processes. Turbidity currents are scaled via dimensionless parameters representing prevalent flow (e.g. Reynolds, Densimetric Froude Number, and Shields Numbers) and sedimentary (e.g. Rouse and Reynolds Particle Numbers) conditions, following the scaling techniques of de Leeuw et al., (2016) which have now been tested in numerous experimental studies e.g. Pohl et al., 2019.</p><p> </p><p>Investigating how varying experimental conditions such as current parameters, severity of breaks in-slope, and, losses of lateral confinement impact the resulting depositional signature of lower slope, and channel-lobe transition zones. Of particular interest is the impact of previously developed bedforms upon current dynamics which will be studied via UVP and ADV measurements, as well as through the application of digital elevation models (DEM), which will be used to understand how systems evolve over multiple runs. DEM models will be generated using a photogrammetry technique capable of producing a high-resolution model (±2mm). The results of which will then be linked to synchronous sedimentological packages – both on the modern seafloor and preserved within ancient geological outcrops – with the aim of enhancing the predictive sedimentological concepts applied to these systems when being interpreted within the subsurface.</p><p> </p><p>A seafloor study will focus upon supercritical bedforms generated by SGFs upon a deep-water slope and terrace located offshore of Senegal, West Africa. Combining seafloor seismic images, high-resolution sparker data, and drop cores taken from deep water channels, and overbanks. Through the interpretation of this dataset, it will be possible to understand the sedimentological variability of bedforms present on this slope system and allude to the flow conditions that led to their formation.</p><p> </p><p>References</p><p>de Leeuw, J., Eggenhuisen, J.T., Cartigny, M.J.B., 2016. Morphodynamics of submarine channel inception revealed by new experimental approach. Nat. Commun. 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms10886</p><p>Pohl, F., Eggenhuisen, J.T., Cartigny, M.J.B., Tilston, M., de Leeuw, J. & Hermidas, N. (in review). The influence of a slope break on turbidite deposits: an experimental investigation. Marine Geology.</p>


1972 ◽  
Vol 109 (2) ◽  
pp. 115-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. W. Piper

SummaryMany deep water marine muds, including lower Palaeozoic mudstones from Britain, have thin graded beds in which mud and silt laminae alternate, with the silt becoming finer and less abundant upwards. Of the known deep-sea depositional processes, turbidity currents are the most likely cause of such graded laminated beds. The lamination may be produced by alternating cohesive and granular bed conditions. Much more careful examination of laminated fine grained terrigenous sediment is needed.


Nature ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 348 (6299) ◽  
pp. 320-322 ◽  
Author(s):  
Detlef Quadfasel ◽  
Hermann Kudrass ◽  
Andrea Frische

2005 ◽  
Vol 50 (5) ◽  
pp. 1654-1666 ◽  
Author(s):  
Denis Gilbert ◽  
Bjorn Sundby ◽  
Charles Gobeil ◽  
Alfonso Mucci ◽  
Gilles-H. Tremblay

2010 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 319-332 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. J. Murillo ◽  
P. Durán Muñoz ◽  
A. Altuna ◽  
A. Serrano

Abstract Murillo, F. J., Durán Muñoz, P., Altuna, A., and Serrano, A. 2011. Distribution of deep-water corals of the Flemish Cap, Flemish Pass, and the Grand Banks of Newfoundland (Northwest Atlantic Ocean): interaction with fishing activities. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 68: 319–332. The distribution of deep-water corals of the Flemish Cap, Flemish Pass, and the Grand Banks of Newfoundland is described based on bycatch from Spanish/EU bottom trawl groundfish surveys between 40 and 1500 m depth. In all, 37 taxa of deep-water corals were identified in the study area: 21 alcyonaceans (including the gorgonians), 11 pennatulaceans, 2 solitary scleractinians, and 3 antipatharians. The greatest diversity of coral species was on the Flemish Cap. Corals were most abundant along the continental slope, between 600 and 1300 m depth. Soft corals (alcyonaceans), sea fans (gorgonians), and black corals (antipatharians) were most common on bedrock or gravel, whereas sea pens (pennatulaceans) and cup corals (solitary scleractinians) were found primarily on mud. The biomass of deep-water corals in the bycatches was highest in previously lightly trawled or untrawled areas, and generally low in the regularly fished grounds. The information derived from bottom-trawl bycatch records is not sufficient to map vulnerable marine ecosystems (VMEs) accurately, but pending more detailed habitat mapping, it provides a valuable indication of the presence/absence of VMEs that can be used to propose the candidate areas for bottom fishery closures or other conservation measures.


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