Contourite drift evolution and related coral growth in the eastern Gulf of Mexico and its gateways

Sediment subbottom profiler and multi-beam data reveal that sediment drifts evolved in various depth intervals between 420 and 650 m water depth in the eastern Golf of Mexico and its gateways. Drift evolution on the western flank of the Yucatan Strait is controlled by the northbound Loop Current dow...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of earth sciences : Geologische Rundschau 2010-10, Vol.99 (Suppl 1), p.191-206
Hauptverfasser: Hübscher, Christian, Dullo, Christian, Flögel, Sascha, Titschack, Jürgen, Schönfeld, Joachim
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container_issue Suppl 1
container_start_page 191
container_title International journal of earth sciences : Geologische Rundschau
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creator Hübscher, Christian
Dullo, Christian
Flögel, Sascha
Titschack, Jürgen
Schönfeld, Joachim
description Sediment subbottom profiler and multi-beam data reveal that sediment drifts evolved in various depth intervals between 420 and 650 m water depth in the eastern Golf of Mexico and its gateways. Drift evolution on the western flank of the Yucatan Strait is controlled by the northbound Loop Current down to 800 m and by a counter-current beneath. On the northern Campeche Bank and the West Florida Slope, drifts evolved in depth of 520–600 m and 420–550 m, respectively. In both instances, the causative contour current represents a counter flow to the Loop Current. The varying depth ranges correlate with an eastward rise of the upper boundary of the Antarctic Intermediate Water. The geometry and reflection pattern of upper slope deposits strongly suggest that the causative bottom current velocities in the eastern Gulf of Mexico varied significantly in space and time. The subbottom profiler data further show peculiar stacked diffraction hyperbolae in depths between 480 and 600 m. Camera and video observations from the seafloor off western Florida imply that the diffraction hyperbolas are formed by boulders and cliffs of sedimentary rock, which are locally colonized by cold-water corals, such as Lophelia pertusa , octocorals and stylasterids.
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subjects Bottom currents
Coral reefs
Earth and Environmental Science
Earth Sciences
Geochemistry
Geology
Geophysics/Geodesy
Intermediate water
Marine biology
Mineral Resources
Ocean floor
Original Paper
Sedimentary rocks
Sedimentation & deposition
Sedimentology
Structural Geology
Velocity
Water depth
title Contourite drift evolution and related coral growth in the eastern Gulf of Mexico and its gateways
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