Morphology of the Continental Margin
The continental margin is the surface morphological expression of the deeper fundamental transition between the thick low density continental igneous crust and the thin high density and chemically different oceanic igneous crust. Covering the transition are thick sediment accumulations comprising ov...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A: Mathematical and physical sciences 1978-08, Vol.290 (1366), p.75-85 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The continental margin is the surface morphological expression of the deeper fundamental transition between the thick low
density continental igneous crust and the thin high density and chemically different oceanic igneous crust. Covering the transition
are thick sediment accumulations comprising over half the total sediments of the ocean, so that the precise morphological
boundaries often differ in position from those of the deeper geology. Continental margins are classified as active or passive
depending on the level of seismicity. Active continental margins are divided into two categories, based on the depth distribution
of earthquakes and the tectonic regime. Active transform margins, characterized by shear and shallow focus earthquakes, result
from horizontal shear motion between plates. Active compressional margins are characterized by shallow, intermediate and deep
earthquakes along a dipping zone, by oceanic trenches and by volcanic island arcs or mountain ranges depending on whether
the margin is ocean-ocean or ocean-continent. Passive margins, found in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, are formed initially
by the rifting of continental crust and mark the ocean-continent boundary within the spreading plate. They are characterized
by continental shelf, slope and rise physiographic provinces. Once clear of the rifting axis, they cool and subside. Sedimentation
can prograde the shelf and load the edge leading to further downwarping; changes of sea level lead to erosion by wave action
and by ice; ocean currents and turbidity currents redistribute sediments; slumps occur in unstable areas. The passive and
sediment-starved margin west of Europe is described where the following factors have been significant: (a) faulting related
to initial rifting; (b) infilling and progradation by sediments; (c) slumping; (d) contour current erosion and deposition;
(e) canyon erosion. |
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ISSN: | 1364-503X 0080-4614 1471-2962 2054-0272 |
DOI: | 10.1098/rsta.1978.0073 |