Title: 16. Sediment Transport across continental shelves William Wilcock
116. Sediment Transport across continental
shelvesWilliam Wilcock
OCEAN/ESS 410
2Lecture/Lab Learning Goals
- Be able to sketch passive continental margins and
label features - Understand how sedimentary processes differ
between active and passive margins - Know how sediments are mobilized on the
continental shelf - Understand how sediments are transported into
deep water and be able to explain the difference
between turbidites and debrites. - Interpret bathymetric maps of submarine canyons
and other coastal features - LAB
3Passive Margins
- Transition from continental to oceanic crust with
no plate boundary. - Formerly sites of continental rifting
4Terminology
Continental Shelf - Average gradient 0.1 Shelf
break at outer edge of shelf at 130-200 m depth
(130 m depth sea level at last glacial
maximum) Continental slope - Average gradient
3-6 Continental rise (typically 1500-4000 m) -
Average gradient 0.1-1 Abyssal Plain (typically
gt 4000 m) - Average slope lt0.1
5Active Margins
- Plate boundary (usually convergent)
- Narrower continental shelf
- Plate boundary can move on geological time scales
- accretion of terrains, accretionary prisms
6Sediment transport differences
Active margins - narrower shelf, typically have a
higher sediment supply, earthquakes destabilize
steep slopes
7Sediment Supply to Continental Shelf
- Rivers
- Glaciers
- Coastal Erosion
Sediment Transport across the Shelf
- Once sediments settle on the seafloor, bottom
currents are required to mobilize them. - Wave motions
- Ocean currents
8Sediment Mobilization - 1. Waves
The wave base or maximum depth of wave motions is
about one half the wave length
9Shallow water waves
- Wave particle orbits flatten out in shallow water
- Wave generated bottom motions
- strongest during major storms (big waves)
- extend deepest when the coast experiences long
wavelength swell from local or distant storms
10Sediment Mobilization 2. Bottom Currents
- The wind driven ocean circulation often leads to
strong ocean currents parallel to the coast. - These interact with the seafloor along the
continental shelf and upper slope. - The currents on the continental shelf are often
strongest near outer margins.
Aguihas current off east coast of southern
Africa. The current flows south and the contours
are in units of cm/s
11Sediment Distribution on the Continental shelf
- Coarse grained sands - require strong currents to
mobilize, often confined to shallow water where
wave bottom interactions are strongest (beaches) - Fine grained muds - require weaker currents to
mobilize, transported to deeper water.
12Sediment Transport from Shelf to Deep Waters
- Turbidity currents (and hyperpycnal flow)
- Fluidized sediment flows
- Debris Flows/Slides
- Grain supported
13Debrites and Turbidites
- Debrites
- Weakley Inversely graded (upward coarsening)
- Thick, but pinch out quickly
- Convoluted bedding
- Turbidites
- Normally graded
- (upward fining)
- Laterally extensive
- Thin
- Horizontal bedding
Lahars and pyroclastic flow deposits, Mt. St.
Helens, WA.
14Debrites and Turbidites
- Debrites
- Weakley Inversely graded (upward coarsening)
- Thick, but pinch out quickly
- Convoluted bedding
- Turbidites
- Normally graded
- (upward fining)
- Laterally extensive
- Thin
- Horizontal bedding
Turbidite in sandstone, unknown location (from
http//uibk.ac.at)
15Transition from Debrites to Turbidites
16Turbidity Current Experiments
There is a good movie of a turbidity current
available at http//learningobjects.wesleyan.edu/
turbiditycurrents/
17Turbidity Currents Erosion and Deposition
18Classical Turbidite
19Sediment Transport from Shelf to Deep Waters
- Turbidites
- Fluidized sediment flows
- Grain supported
- Debris Flows/Slides
20Submarine Channels
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