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One Million Years of Climatic Generated Landslide Events on the Northwestern Barents Sea Continental Margin

Authors :
Rebesco, Michele
Pedrosa-González, María Teresa
Camerlenghi, Angelo
Lucchi, Renata G.
Sauli, Chiara
De Mol, Ben
Madrussani, Gianni
Urgeles, Roger
Rossi, Giuliana
Böhm, Gualtiero
Rebesco, Michele
Pedrosa-González, María Teresa
Camerlenghi, Angelo
Lucchi, Renata G.
Sauli, Chiara
De Mol, Ben
Madrussani, Gianni
Urgeles, Roger
Rossi, Giuliana
Böhm, Gualtiero
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Relatively recent, shallow landslides are imaged both on swath bathymetry, sub-bottom and multichannel seismic reflection (MCS) data from the upper-middle continental slope on the Storfjorden and Kveithola Trough Mouth Fans, NW Barents Sea margin. Giant paleo-landslide deposits, detected only by MCS profiles, are characterized by chaotic acoustic units up to about 250 m thick on the lower continental slope. The thickest, oldest landslide, dated between 1 and 0.8 Ma, took place just after the large-scale intensification of glaciation in the Barents Sea. The apparent spatial coincidence of landslides and channels with the boundary between the two fan systems, that are generated due to huge quantities of sediments transported to the continental slope by paleo-ice streams, suggests a common controlling climatic process for their development. Most probably the slides are related to the abundance of basal meltwater beneath the ice sheet, which in addition to determining ice stream motion and lubrication also influences the behavior of mass wasting processes

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1103416069
Document Type :
Electronic Resource