Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Contained turbidites used to track sea bed deformation and basin migration, Sorbas Basin, south‐east Spain

View through CrossRef
ABSTRACT The mechanisms driving subsidence in late orogenic basins are often not easily resolved on account of later fault reactivation and a rapidly changing stress field. Contained turbidites in such basins provide a unique opportunity of monitoring sea bed deformation and evolving bathymetry and hence patterns of subsidence during basin filling. A variety of interpretations have been proposed to explain subsidence in Neogene basins in SE Spain, including extensional, strike‐slip and thrust top mechanisms. Ponded turbidite sheets on the floor of the Neogene Sorbas Basin (SE Spain) were deposited by sand‐bearing currents which ran into enclosed bathymetric deeps where they underwent rapid suspension collapse. The structure and distribution of these sheets (and the thick mudstone caps which overlie them) act as a proxy for the containing sea bed bathymetry at the time of deposition. An analysis of the sheet architecture helps identify a trough‐axial zone of syndepositional faulting and reveals a westwards stepping of the ponding depocentre with time. Fault breaks at the sea bed influenced the position of flow arrest and the distribution of sandstone beds on the basin floor. Westward stepping of the deeper bathymetry was episodic and probably controlled by transverse faults. Re‐locations of the depocentre were accompanied by the destabilization of carbonate sand stores on the margins of the basin, resulting in the repeated emplacement of large‐volume carbonate megabeds and calciturbidites. The fill to the Sorbas Basin was shingled by the onset of compression in the east attributed to transfer of slip between intersecting strike‐slip fault strands. A sinistral fault (a splay of the Carboneras Fault System) propagated through the evolving basin fill from the east as the eastern part of the basin became inverted and the locus of subsidence migrated into the Tabernas area 20 km area to the west. The sedimentological analysis of the basin fill helps see through a late dextral overprint which ultimately juxtaposed basement rocks to the south against the inverted and upended basin, along a late slip‐modified unconformity. Conventional palaeostress analysis of fractures along the basin margin fails to see past this late dextral shearing event. Basin migration parallel to the E–W‐orientated basin axis, slip‐reversal (sinistral to dextral) and the active involvement of strike‐slip faults are now identified as important aspects of the evolution of the Sorbas Basin during the latestTortonian.
Title: Contained turbidites used to track sea bed deformation and basin migration, Sorbas Basin, south‐east Spain
Description:
ABSTRACT The mechanisms driving subsidence in late orogenic basins are often not easily resolved on account of later fault reactivation and a rapidly changing stress field.
Contained turbidites in such basins provide a unique opportunity of monitoring sea bed deformation and evolving bathymetry and hence patterns of subsidence during basin filling.
A variety of interpretations have been proposed to explain subsidence in Neogene basins in SE Spain, including extensional, strike‐slip and thrust top mechanisms.
Ponded turbidite sheets on the floor of the Neogene Sorbas Basin (SE Spain) were deposited by sand‐bearing currents which ran into enclosed bathymetric deeps where they underwent rapid suspension collapse.
The structure and distribution of these sheets (and the thick mudstone caps which overlie them) act as a proxy for the containing sea bed bathymetry at the time of deposition.
An analysis of the sheet architecture helps identify a trough‐axial zone of syndepositional faulting and reveals a westwards stepping of the ponding depocentre with time.
Fault breaks at the sea bed influenced the position of flow arrest and the distribution of sandstone beds on the basin floor.
Westward stepping of the deeper bathymetry was episodic and probably controlled by transverse faults.
Re‐locations of the depocentre were accompanied by the destabilization of carbonate sand stores on the margins of the basin, resulting in the repeated emplacement of large‐volume carbonate megabeds and calciturbidites.
The fill to the Sorbas Basin was shingled by the onset of compression in the east attributed to transfer of slip between intersecting strike‐slip fault strands.
A sinistral fault (a splay of the Carboneras Fault System) propagated through the evolving basin fill from the east as the eastern part of the basin became inverted and the locus of subsidence migrated into the Tabernas area 20 km area to the west.
The sedimentological analysis of the basin fill helps see through a late dextral overprint which ultimately juxtaposed basement rocks to the south against the inverted and upended basin, along a late slip‐modified unconformity.
Conventional palaeostress analysis of fractures along the basin margin fails to see past this late dextral shearing event.
Basin migration parallel to the E–W‐orientated basin axis, slip‐reversal (sinistral to dextral) and the active involvement of strike‐slip faults are now identified as important aspects of the evolution of the Sorbas Basin during the latestTortonian.

Related Results

Testing the assumptions of turbidite paleoseismology using the 2016 Kaikōura earthquake
Testing the assumptions of turbidite paleoseismology using the 2016 Kaikōura earthquake
Understanding the magnitude and frequency of earthquakes at subduction zones beyond historical and instrumental records is paramount to understanding the potential hazard these ear...
Sea Surface Temperatures variations during the Messinian in the Sorbas Basin
Sea Surface Temperatures variations during the Messinian in the Sorbas Basin
In the Mediterranean region, the end of the Miocene is marked by the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC; 5.97 - 5.33 Ma), a peculiar event that governed environmental modifications in ...
Cave Turbidites
Cave Turbidites
Turbidites are uncommon in caves, but are more common as palaeokarst deposits. Marine carbonate turbidites, called cay­manites, are the most common cave and palaeokarst turbidites,...
THE MECHANISM FOR CRETACEOUS TURBIDITE DEPOSITION IN LOWER PRIAMURYE
THE MECHANISM FOR CRETACEOUS TURBIDITE DEPOSITION IN LOWER PRIAMURYE
The mechanism for deposition of Cretaceous turbidites in Lower Priamurye, just like all turbidites in general, is based on the hydrodynamic regime in the basin of their accumulatio...
Rural-Urban Migration
Rural-Urban Migration
Rural-urban migration refers to the movement of people from rural to urban areas. Defining migration is not easy; the same can be said for “rural” and “urban.” All three of these c...
Geohazards in the Yellow Sea and East China Sea
Geohazards in the Yellow Sea and East China Sea
ABSTRACT Shallow submarine geology in the Yellow and East China seas is dicta ted mostly by the proximity of the Yellow and Yangtze Rivers and by the late Quatern...
On three types of sea breeze in Qingdao of East China: an observational analysis
On three types of sea breeze in Qingdao of East China: an observational analysis
Our knowledge of sea breeze remains poor in the coastal area of East China, due largely to the high terrain heterogeneity. Five–year (2016–2020) consecutive wind observations from ...
The Paleogene Gosau Group of Gams slope basin of the incipient Eastern Alpine orogenic wedge (Austria)
The Paleogene Gosau Group of Gams slope basin of the incipient Eastern Alpine orogenic wedge (Austria)
<p>This study investigates the Paleogene deep-water depositional system of the Gosau Group at Gams, Styria (Austria). The examined sections of Danian to Ypresian age ...

Back to Top