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Large-scale submarine landslides, channel and gully systems on the southern Weddell Sea margin, Antarctica

New multibeam bathymetric data from the southeastern Weddell Sea show significant differences in surface morphology of the outer continental shelf and slope between two adjacent cross-shelf troughs. These are the Filchner Trough and a smaller trough to the east which we refer to as the ‘Halley Troug...

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Published in:Marine geology 2014-02, Vol.348, p.73-87
Main Authors: Gales, J.A., Leat, P.T., Larter, R.D., Kuhn, G., Hillenbrand, C.-D., Graham, A.G.C., Mitchell, N.C., Tate, A.J., Buys, G.B., Jokat, W.
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-a474t-4c13fe313a946d01f31d1a2ff001058743f436e5e39295009d9e952013835aa43
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container_issue
container_start_page 73
container_title Marine geology
container_volume 348
creator Gales, J.A.
Leat, P.T.
Larter, R.D.
Kuhn, G.
Hillenbrand, C.-D.
Graham, A.G.C.
Mitchell, N.C.
Tate, A.J.
Buys, G.B.
Jokat, W.
description New multibeam bathymetric data from the southeastern Weddell Sea show significant differences in surface morphology of the outer continental shelf and slope between two adjacent cross-shelf troughs. These are the Filchner Trough and a smaller trough to the east which we refer to as the ‘Halley Trough’. Multibeam bathymetric data, acoustic sub-bottom profiler and seismic data show major differences in the incidence and morphologies of submarine gullies, channel systems, submarine slides and iceberg scours, and in sediment deposition. These large-scale differences suggest significant variation in slope and sedimentary processes and in the environmental setting between the two troughs, leading to much greater deposition at the mouth of the Filchner Trough. Bedforms, including a terminal moraine and scalloped embayments on the outer shelf of the Halley Trough, provide insight into the relative timing and extent of past ice-sheet grounding and point to grounded ice near to the shelf edge during the Late Quaternary. The new data reveal two large-scale submarine slides on the upper slope of the eastern Crary Fan, a trough mouth fan offshore from the Filchner Trough. Both slides head at the shelf edge (~500m water depth), with the largest slide measuring 20km wide and with an incision depth of 60m. Multibeam and seismic data show elongate slabs on the seafloor surface of the mid-slope. The lack of a discernible sedimentary cover suggests that they were generated after the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). This is unusual because post-LGM submarine slides are very rare on the Antarctic continental margin, and to our knowledge, no other post-LGM slides have been documented on an Antarctic trough mouth fan. Because the slides occur on a part of the continental slope where the deposition of glacial debris was greatest, we speculate that weaker, unconsolidated sedimentary layers within the subsurface are important for slide initiation here. •Geomorphology shows different slope processes at two cross-shelf trough mouths.•Two large and relatively young submarine slides occur on the Antarctic margin.•Outer shelf morphology suggests ice extent near shelf edge during Late Quaternary.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.margeo.2013.12.002
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ispartof Marine geology, 2014-02, Vol.348, p.73-87
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1872-6151
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source ScienceDirect Freedom Collection 2022-2024
subjects Antarctica
Channels
continental slope
Deposition
Gullies
Marine
mass wasting
Morphology
Mouth
Shelves
slope processes
Slopes
trough mouth fan
title Large-scale submarine landslides, channel and gully systems on the southern Weddell Sea margin, Antarctica
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