Facies distribution in the Ordovician Pingliang Formation (southern Ordos Basin, China) and the role of turbidity currents

2022 ◽  
pp. 247-267
Author(s):  
Youbin He ◽  
A.J. (Tom) van Loon ◽  
Hua Li
2018 ◽  
Vol 471 (1) ◽  
pp. 155-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Mulholland ◽  
Paolo Esestime ◽  
Karyna Rodriguez ◽  
Phillip John Hargreaves

2016 ◽  
Vol 69 ◽  
pp. 205-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fengyang Xiong ◽  
Zhenxue Jiang ◽  
Jianfa Chen ◽  
Xiangzeng Wang ◽  
Zhilong Huang ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 331-347
Author(s):  
Hua Li ◽  
A.J. van Loon ◽  
Youbin He

The Late Ordovician Pingliang Formation accumulated along the southern margin of the Ordos Basin in China. The convergence of the Yangtze Plate and Sino-Korean Plate led to a trench–arc–basin system during the Middle Ordovician, with a platform- and slope-dominated setting in the east where a graben complicated the overall simple paleogeographical picture, relatively parallel zones of a platform and a slope setting in the middle, and a change from platform to slope to deep marine to a trench setting in the west. This configuration resulted in various types of gravity flow deposits and contourites with different compositions and pathways. The present study focuses on the typical characteristics of contourites in the geological record and the relationships between contour currents and gravity flows. The Pingliang Formation contains eleven lithofacies grouped into five facies associations. These facies associations represent deep sea autochthonous deposits, several types of debrites, turbidites, and contourites, as well as turbidites within which the fine-grained top portion was reworked by a contour current. The various lithofacies are concentrated in different parts of the study area: micritic contourites and debrites are concentrated in the eastern part; debrites, and sandstone and siltstone turbidites are concentrated in the middle part; and calcarenitic turbidites, contourites, and reworked turbidites occur in the western part. The main contour current ran parallel to the contour lines from east to west. Although most of the contour current continually moved westward in the eastern part of the study area, a minor part split off and followed a semicircular pathway through the Fuping Graben; its velocity became reduced here so that micritic contourites were deposited. The velocity of the contour current was increased locally when it entered a confined trough in the western part of the study area. The relatively high energy of the contour current here resulted in calcarenitic contourites. The velocity of the contour current was low where it ran through an open environment, resulting in fine-grained, thin contourites in the middle part of the study area. Large turbidity currents and debris flows occurred here, and their high energy destroyed almost all earlier deposited contourites. This explains why traces of contour currents in the middle part of the study are very scarce, although the east–west-running contour current must have passed through this area.


Geology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guangfa Zhong ◽  
Xiaotong Peng

Manned submersible dives discovered plastic litter accumulations in a submarine canyon located in the northwestern South China Sea, ~150 km from the nearest coast. These plastic-dominated litter accumulations were mostly concentrated in two large scours in the steeper middle reach of the canyon. Plastic particles and fragments generally occurred on the upstreamfacing sides of large boulders and other topographic obstacles, indicating obstruction during down-valley transportation. Most of the litter accumulations were distributed in the up-valley dipping slopes downstream of the scour centers. This pattern is tentatively linked to turbidity currents, which accelerated down the steep upstream slopes of the scours and underwent a hydraulic jump toward the scour centers before decelerating on the upstream-facing flank. Associated seabed sediment consisted of clayey and sandy silts, with unimodal or bimodal grain-size distributions, which are typical for turbidites. The focused distribution of the litter accumulations is therefore linked to turbidity currents that episodically flush the canyon. Our findings provide evidence that litter dispersion in the deep sea may initially be governed by gravity flows, and that turbidity currents efficiently transfer plastic litter to the deeper ocean floor.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
François Mettra ◽  
Koen Blanckaert ◽  
Ulrich Lemmin ◽  
David Andrew Barry

<p>In Lake Geneva, a deep peri-Alpine lake in Switzerland, the sublacustrine Rhône River delta presents a deep canyon, the Rhône Canyon. Previous studies and recent observations show that low-velocity underflows and high-velocity turbidity currents pass frequently in the Rhône Canyon. The former carry little sediment, are long-lasting, slow moving and typically occur in winter when the lake is destratified, whereas the latter are sediment-rich, short-lived and occasionally generate high velocities. In the present study, we revisit three different event types that can trigger turbidity currents in the Rhône Canyon: large-scale floods of the Rhône River, sublacustrine slides on the Rhône delta and short high concentration sediment transport events induced by localized severe storms in the Rhône watershed (~5500 km<sup>2</sup>). Simultaneous observations of hyperconcentrated sediment-laden floods or debris flows in small sub-catchments (as small as 4 km<sup>2</sup>), suspended sediment concentration at the Rhône river mouth, and velocity profiles in the Rhône canyon demonstrate how localized storm events trigger turbidity currents in the canyon. Evidence that these turbidity currents can continue into the deep hypolimnion of Lake Geneva is provided. Preliminary estimations of the frequency of turbidity currents relative to their type of triggering and their contribution to the total sediment load discharged into Lake Geneva are discussed.</p>


2012 ◽  
Vol 610-613 ◽  
pp. 2688-2692
Author(s):  
Jun Zhang ◽  
Zhen Hong Zhao ◽  
Hong Yun Ma ◽  
Dong Wang ◽  
Li Guo

The structure of groundwater flow system is the core of study of groundwater system and the base of evaluation of groundwater resources. The control role of aquifer system to groundwater flow system is a key of study of the structure of groundwater flow system. The groundwater systems of the Ordos basin are analyzed as a case study. The control role of aquifer system to groundwater flow system is studied by comparison of groundwater flow systems under the control of different aquifer structures in 2-D profile numerical model. The research shows that the groundwater flow systems of the Ordos basin have the multilayer structure characteristics. The groundwater flow systems in the north of the Ordos basin show a cross-formational multi-hierarchy nested flow pattern in the northern aquifer systems without regional impermeable layer where the hydraulic connection between aquifer layers is closely. While, the hydraulic connection is discontinuous in the southern aquifer systems because there are regional impermeable layers in the aquifer systems. The groundwater flow systems in the south of the Ordos basin show a follow-formational flow pattern.


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