Titre | Glacigenic debris-flows and down-slope gullies: evidence of a grounded ice margin during past glacials, South Shetland Trench, Antarctica |
Télécharger | Téléchargement (publication entière) |
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Licence | Veuillez noter que la Licence du gouvernement
ouvert - Canada remplace toutes les licences antérieures. |
Auteur | Stewart, H A; Jamieson, A J; Ó Cofaigh, C; Bradwell, T |
Source | Program and abstracts: 2017 GeoHab Conference, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada; par Todd, B J ; Brown, C J; Lacharité, M; Gazzola, V; McCormack, E; Commission géologique du Canada, Dossier public 8295, 2017 p. 111, https://doi.org/10.4095/305931 Accès ouvert |
Liens | GeoHab 2017
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Année | 2017 |
Éditeur | Ressources naturelles Canada |
Réunion | 2017 GeoHab: Marine Geological and Biological Habitat Mapping; Dartmouth, NS; CA; mai 1-4, 2017 |
Document | dossier public |
Lang. | anglais |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.4095/305931 |
Media | en ligne; numérique |
Référence reliée | Cette publication est contenue dans Program and
abstracts: 2017 GeoHab Conference, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada |
Formats | pdf |
Région | Antarctica; Antarctic Peninsula; South Shetland Islands; Bransfield Strait; Drakes Passage; King George Island |
Lat/Long OENS | -63.0000 -54.0000 -61.0000 -63.0000 |
Sujets | techniques de cartographie; océanographie; milieux marins; marges continentales; plate-forme continentale; talus continental; bathymétrie; caractéristiques sous-marines; fosses océaniques; recherche sur
les régions froides; échantillons carrotés; levés géophysiques; levés acoustiques marins; levés au sonar; sonar latéral; rigoles; glaciologie; glaciers; erosion glaciaire; marges glaciaires; dépôts glaciaires; dépôts glaciomarins; coulées de débris;
dépôts de coulée de débris; antecedents glaciaires; marges glaciaires; cadre tectonique; marges plaques; zones de subduction; caractéristiques structurales; failles; érosion; courants de turbidite; géologie marine; géologie des dépôts
meubles/géomorphologie; géologie de l'environnement; géophysique; tectonique |
Programme | Géoscience en mer |
Diffusé | 2017 09 26 |
Résumé | (disponible en anglais seulement) The South Shetland Trench (SST) is located near the Antarctic Peninsula, around 100 km northwest, and parallel to, the South Shetland Islands. Although a number
of studies examining glacial history have been undertaken in the Bransfield Strait located between the South Shetland Islands and the Antarctic Peninsula to the south, the authors believe this is the first study of the seafloor glacial geomorphology,
and recent glacial history of the SST. This paper presents initial results from a EUROFLEETS Expedition to the SST that took place in December 2015. The Expedition collected three gravity cores, 3148 square kilometres of multibeam echosounder
data and around 600 line kilometres of Topas sub-bottom data covering part of the southern flank and trench floor of the study area. Additional bathymetry data derived from the Global Multi-Resolution Topography (GMRT) Synthesis (Marine Geoscience
Data System www.marine-geo.org) comprising a multi-resolution global Digital Elevation Model (DEM) that includes processed multibeam bathymetry data (100 m resolution) where available and gridded seafloor depths (30 arc-second resolution) derived
from the General Bathymetric Chart of the Oceans (GEBCO www.gebco.net). These combined data reveal the study area, north of King George Island, on the southern flank of the SST to host a system of linear downslope gullies, glacigenic debris flows and
glacigenic deposits. Within the study area glacigenic debris flows are found to extend from the continental shelf break to the lower continental slope. Sub-bottom profiler data penetrated up to 150 ms below seafloor in places and reveal a stacked
sequence of debris flows suggestive of a fluctuating ice front that was grounded to, and retreated from, the shelf break on several occasions. More than eleven individual gullies (and their tributaries) were imaged between 450 m and 3600 m water
depth. The gullies are incised up to 250 m below the surrounding sea bed with internal slope angles locally exceeding 45° and were influenced by shallow transform faulting related to subduction processes. Downslope gullies have been observed on
other glaciated margins such as the Scotian slope offshore Canada, Ross Sea Antarctica, north-western Barents Sea and West Shetland Margin offshore north-western UK. The gullies are inferred as being eroded by turbidity currents comprising cold,
dense, sediment-rich meltwater released from an ice front located at or near the continental shelf break. |
Sommaire | (Résumé en langage clair et simple, non publié) La seizième conférence annuelle GeoHab s'est déroulée cette année (2017) au campus Waterfront du Nova Scotia Community College à Dartmouth, en
Nouvelle-Écosse, au Canada. |
GEOSCAN ID | 305931 |
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