Provenance and pathways of late Quaternary turbidites in the deep-water Agadir Basin, northwest African margin

A series of individual turbidites, correlated over distances >100 km, are present in the recent fill of the Agadir Basin, offshore northwest Africa. The aim here is to unravel multiple turbidite source areas and flow pathways, and show how turbidite provenance studies contribute to interpretation...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of earth sciences : Geologische Rundschau 2009-06, Vol.98 (4), p.721-733
Hauptverfasser: Frenz, Michael, Wynn, Russell B., Georgiopoulou, Aggeliki, Bender, Vera B., Hough, Gayle, Masson, Douglas G., Talling, Peter J., Cronin, Bryan T.
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container_issue 4
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container_title International journal of earth sciences : Geologische Rundschau
container_volume 98
creator Frenz, Michael
Wynn, Russell B.
Georgiopoulou, Aggeliki
Bender, Vera B.
Hough, Gayle
Masson, Douglas G.
Talling, Peter J.
Cronin, Bryan T.
description A series of individual turbidites, correlated over distances >100 km, are present in the recent fill of the Agadir Basin, offshore northwest Africa. The aim here is to unravel multiple turbidite source areas and flow pathways, and show how turbidite provenance studies contribute to interpretation of flow processes. Agadir Basin turbidites are sourced from four main areas, with the majority originating from the siliciclastic Morocco Shelf; their sand-mud distribution is strongly controlled by flow sediment volume, with relatively low-volume flows dying out within the Agadir Basin and large-volume flows bypassing significant sediment volumes to basins further downslope. Two large-volume volcaniclastic turbidites are attributed to a Canary Islands landslide source, while several small mud-dominated turbidites are interpreted to be locally sourced from hemipelagic-draped seamounts (e.g. Turbidite AB10). Finally, Turbidite AB1 (∼1 ka) is only present in the western Agadir Basin, and is linked to recent “re-activation” of the Sahara Slide headwall. The muddy suspension clouds of three large-volume flows, all linked to large-scale landslides, have covered huge areas of seafloor and flowed along or even slightly upslope for long distances. It is proposed that northeastwards-flowing bottom currents have aided transport of these dilute flow fractions into and across the Agadir Basin.
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subjects Bottom currents
Deep water
Earth and Environmental Science
Earth Sciences
Fluid dynamics
Geochemistry
Geology
Geophysics/Geodesy
Landslides
Marine
Mineral Resources
Ocean floor
Original Paper
Physical oceanography
Quaternary
Seamounts
Sedimentology
Sediments
Structural Geology
title Provenance and pathways of late Quaternary turbidites in the deep-water Agadir Basin, northwest African margin
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