The role of structural growth in controlling the facies and distribution of mass transport deposits in a deep-water salt minibasin

2019 ◽  
Vol 104 ◽  
pp. 106-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gemma Doughty-Jones ◽  
Lidia Lonergan ◽  
Mike Mayall ◽  
StephenJ. Dee
2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (5) ◽  
pp. 789-807
Author(s):  
G. H. Browne ◽  
S. Bull ◽  
M. J. Arnot ◽  
A. F. Boyes ◽  
P. R. King ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoe Perez ◽  
Julia Fonseca ◽  
Helenice Vital ◽  
Andre Silva ◽  
David Castro

<p>The Brazilian Continental Margin (BEM) deep-water regions contain important geological features that need advance in their characterization. Mass-transport deposits (MTD) are important not only by their significance in the sedimentary but also because of their negative impact economically. A slump is a coherent mass of sediment that moves on a concave-up glide plane and undergoes rotational movements causing internal deformation and one of the basic types of MTD. The study area comprises part of the offshore Potiguar Basin in NE Brazil, on the distal eastern portion of the Touros High and Fernando de Noronha Ridge. This portion of the Potiguar Basin comprises a transform rift system that has evolved into a continental passive margin. This basin represents an important location related to the breakup between South America and Africa. The database used in this work included 2D post-stack time-migrated seismic profiles from the Brazilian Agency of Petroleum, Natural Gas, and Biofuels (ANP). The slumps reflectors are identified on the continental shelf profiles in form of present clinoform configuration, medium to high continuity, high amplitudes, and medium to high frequencies, representing a sigmoidal oblique complex prograding reflector. The slump scars at the continental slope indicate that this is a gravitationally unstable area that will eventually collapse, resulting in erosional features on the continental slope and deposition on the continental rise. Our results provide some insights regarding MDT slumps sedimentary evolution in the BEM deep water area as well as their interrelation with other sedimentary deposits.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 90 (7) ◽  
pp. 729-762
Author(s):  
Daniel E. Tek ◽  
Miquel Poyatos-Moré ◽  
Marco Patacci ◽  
Adam D. McArthur ◽  
Luca Colombera ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The inception and evolution of channels in deep-water systems is controlled by the axial gradient and lateral confinement experienced by their formative flows. These parameters are often shaped by the action of tectonic structures and/or the emplacement of mass-transport deposits (MTDs). The Arro turbidite system (Aínsa depocenter, Spanish Pyrenees) is an ancient example of a deep-water channelized system from a bathymetrically complex basin, deposited in an active tectonic setting. Sedimentologic fieldwork and geologic mapping of the Arro system has been undertaken to provide context for a detailed study of three of the best-exposed outcrops: Sierra de Soto Gully, Barranco de la Caxigosa, and Muro de Bellos. These locations exemplify the role of confinement in controlling the facies and architecture in the system. Sedimentologic characterization of the deposits has allowed the identification of fifteen facies and eight facies associations; these form a continuum and are non-unique to any depositional environment. However, architectural characterization allowed the grouping of facies associations into four depositional elements: i) weakly confined, increasing-to-decreasing energy deposits; ii) progradational, weakly confined to overbank deposits; iii) alternations of MTDs and turbidites; iv) channel fills. Different styles of channel architecture are observed. In Barranco de la Caxigosa, a master surface which was cut and subsequently filled hosts three channel stories with erosional bases; channelization was enhanced by quasi-instantaneous imposition of lateral confinement by the emplacement of MTDs. In Muro de Bellos, the inception of partially levee-confined channel stories was enhanced by progressive narrowing of the depositional fairway by tectonic structures, which also controlled their migration. Results of this study suggest that deep-water channelization in active tectonic settings may be enhanced or hindered due to: 1) flow interaction with MTD-margin topography or; 2) MTD-top topography; 3) differential compaction of MTDs and/or sediment being loaded into MTDs; 4) formation of megascours by erosive MTDs; 5) basin-floor topography being reset by MTDs. Therefore, the Arro system can be used as an analog for ancient subsurface or outcrop of channelized deposits in bathymetrically complex basins, or as an ancient record of deposits left by flow types observed in modern confined systems.


2016 ◽  
Vol 77 ◽  
pp. 515-525 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.P. Corella ◽  
J.-L. Loizeau ◽  
K. Kremer ◽  
M. Hilbe ◽  
J. Gerard ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
PETER R. KING ◽  
BRADLEY R. ILG ◽  
MALCOLM ARNOT ◽  
GREG H. BROWNE ◽  
LORNA J. STRACHAN ◽  
...  

Sedimentology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel E. Tek ◽  
Adam D. Mcarthur ◽  
Miquel Poyatos‐Moré ◽  
Luca Colombera ◽  
Marco Patacci ◽  
...  

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