Title: Geological Oceanography Section II Lecture 3
1Geological Oceanography Section II Lecture 3
- Continental Shelf Sedimentation 14 February 2008
2Sedimentation on Continental Shelves and Margins
- Sedimentary Provinces - Shelf
- Beaches and barrier Islands (covered previously)
- Estuaries
- Deltas
- Shelves
- Sedimentary Provinces - Margins
- Slopes
- Submarine Fans
- Sediment Drifts
3Recommendation
- The following CMS seminars presented last spring
are pertinent to this lecture!!! - Charlie Paull (March 2, 2007)
- Detecting and Monitoring Recent Sediment
Transport Activity in Monterey Canyon - Mike Blum (March 9, 2007)
- Holocene Sea-Level Change, Northern Gulf of
Mexico - Dave Cacchione (March 23, 2007)
- Sediment Movement by Internal Waves and Tides on
Continental Margins
4Single most important factor influencing
continental shelf and margin sedimentation
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6Major Mechanisms Influencing Shelf Sedimentation
- Tectonics
- Watershed characteristics
- Shelf/margin characteristics
- Climate
- Weathering mechanisms and rates
- Transport mechanisms and rates
- Biogenic and authigenic processes
- History
- Paleoclimate
- Sealevel history
- Oceanography
- Prevailing winds/fetch
- Oceanic and local geostrophic currents
- Tides and tidal currents
7Tectonics influence
- Watershed
- Area
- Topography
- Geology
- Climate
- Adiabatic
- Rain shadows
- Shelf and margin
- Area
- Topography
- Geology
8What do I mean by watershed?
9Dr. Naar discussed tectonic processes
- Why do continental margins exist?
- Types of continental margins
- Convergent/active
- Divergent/passive/trailing
- Conjugate, shear, etc.
- Margin structures
- How margins form
- How do margins mature
- Isostatic loading
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12Tectonic Influence on Climate
13Primary Mechanisms Influencing Shelf
Sedimentation
- Tectonics
- Watershed characteristics
- Shelf/margin characteristics
- Climate
- Weathering mechanisms and rates
- Transport mechanisms and rates
- Biogenic and authigenic processes
- History
- Sealevel history
- Paleoclimate
- Oceanography
- Prevailing winds/fetch
- Oceanic and local geostrophic currents
- Tides and tidal currents
14Climate Zones
http//www.blueplanetbiomes.org/climate.htm
15Weathering and climate chemical weathering and
frost action require moisture
Revised from Peltier 1950, Annals, Association of
American Geographers. v. 40
16Relative depth of weathering with climate and
vegetation assumes minimal relief.
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20Sediments reflect climatic conditions
(Schopf 1980)
21Primary Mechanisms Influencing Shelf
Sedimentation
- Tectonics
- Watershed characteristics
- Shelf/margin characteristics
- Climate
- Weathering mechanisms and rates
- Transport mechanisms and rates
- Biogenic and authigenic processes
- History
- Sealevel history
- Paleoclimate
- Oceanography
- Prevailing winds/fetch
- Oceanic and local geostrophic currents
- Tides and tidal currents
22Sea Level Changes Through Geologic Time
23James (1997)
24Last Glacial Maximum18-20,000 ybp
25Holocene sea-level rise
- Low-moderate rates of sediment supply
- Sediments trapped in estuaries
- Shelf has relict, biogenic or authigenic
sediments - Sediment delivery to margins diminished
- Examples much of shelf of eastern US
- High rates of sediment supply
- Deltas prograding over shelf
- Sediments being delivered to margins and deep-sea
fans - Examples
- Mississippi delta, Mississippi fan
- Ganges-Brahmaputra delta, Bengal fan
26Chesapeake Baydrowned valley sea level rise
outpaced sediment supply
27Mississippi Delta high rate of sediment supply
http//www.ssec.wisc.edu/gumley/modis_gallery/ima
ges/MississippiDelta_20040127_1940_250m.jpg
28Paleoclimate
- In areas of low-moderate sediment supply
- Shoreline and relict shelf sediments may reflect
Pleistocene conditions and sea levels - Examples
- Relict glacial features and sediments
characterize shelves of northeastern US and
eastern Canada - Areas not currently glaciated
- Paleoshorelines and relict barrier islands on
west Florida shelf - More discussion later in lecture
29Primary Mechanisms Influencing Shelf
Sedimentation
- Tectonics
- Watershed characteristics
- Shelf/margin characteristics
- Climate
- Weathering mechanisms and rates
- Transport mechanisms and rates
- Biogenic and authigenic processes
- History
- Sealevel history
- Paleoclimate
- Oceanography
- Prevailing winds/fetch
- Oceanic and local geostrophic currents
- Tides and tidal currents
30Fetch distance over which winds blow
unobstructed
31http//www.bergey.com/Maps/World.Wind.Lg.htm
32Tidal ranges worldwide
Open University Waves, Tides and Shallow-water
Processes (1989)
33Shelf Sedimentary Provinces
- Beaches/barrier Islands
- covered later by Dr. Hine
- Estuaries
- Deltas
- Reefs (later lecture)
- Shelves
34- An estuary is an inlet of the sea reaching into a
river valley as far as the upper limit of tidal
influence
Open University Waves, Tides and Shallow-water
Processes (1989)
35Estuary Types
- Salt-wedge estuaries
- River discharge rate much stronger than tidal
activity - Sharp halocline with freshwater at surface
- Partially mixed estuaries
- Discharge into moderate tidal range
- Well-mixed estuaries
- Tidal currents strong relative to river discharge
- Negative-circulation estuaries
- Occur in arid regions
- Hypersaline water at the head of the estuary
- Flows seaward along estuary floor
Figures Open University Waves, Tides and
Shallow-water Processes (1989)
36Salt-wedge estuary
37Partially mixed estuary
38Well mixed estuary
39Well mixed estuary
40Negative estuarine circulation
Open University Waves, Tides and Shallow-water
Processes (1989)
41River Deltas
- Main conduit of terrigenous materials to ocean
- Suspended load-muds
- Bedload-sands
- Dissolved load - cations/anions
42Deltas
- Provide sediments to coastlines, barrier islands
and marshes - Huge wetlands--key environment
- Sediments can be transported great distances down
into ocean basin from deltas - Deltas can be enormously thick
- undergo compaction, isostatic adjustment
- Deltas impacted by sea-level change.
43Societal Significance of Deltas
- Modern and ancient deltas are great producers of
oil/gas - Ancient deltas are major producers of coal
- Natural hazards -- support huge populations
impacted by typhoons - Bangladesh Nov 1970 155 mph typhoon, 7m storm
surge 400,000 drowned - Bangladesh Apr 1990, 145 mph typhoon, 6 m
surge, 140,000 drowned, 500,000 large farm
animals drowned, 10 million homeless
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46Basic structure of a delta
Open University Waves, Tides and Shallow-water
Processes (1989), p. 131
Delta front
Pro-delta
Note error in text
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48River-dominated delta
- Tidal range is low
- Tidal currents weak
- Wave action relatively weak
- Density stratification may occur
- Speed of river flow is low to moderate
- Distributary mouth deep enough for salt-water
penetration - Fresh water plume over salt water
- A type of salt-wedge estuary
Figures Open University Waves, Tides and
Shallow-water Processes (1989)
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51Turbulent mixingrapid fluvial discharge
precludes density stratification
Into deep water
52Turbulent mixingrapid fluvial discharge
precludes density stratification
Into shallow water
53Progradation of sedimentsupply- dominated delta
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56Wave-dominated delta
57Wave-dominated delta
58Delta classification based on sediment supply and
influence of waves and tides
59Tidal ranges worldwide
Open University Waves, Tides and Shallow-water
Processes (1989)
60Recall what I said previously about tidal
transport and deposition
More sand
Channel
Rippled fine, muddy sands
61Changes in current velocity during a complete
tidal cycle.
Changes in rate of bedload transport during same
tidal cycle. Shaded areas are proportional to
total sediment transported.
Incoming
Outgoing
62Tide- dominated delta
- Sediments delivered by river are reworked by
tides - Form linear, subaqueous ridges
- Former ridges become vegetated, linear islands
63The Continental Shelf
- Marine terraces that surround continents
- Very narrow (1 km) to very wide (100s km)
- Sediments range from relict to massive deltas
- Dominated by terrigenous or carbonate or mixed
- Wave or tide dominated
- Effects of sea level change enormous
- Coastal plains are exposed continental shelves
- Archeological/paleontological implications
- Sharks teeth and mammoth teeth on west Florida
shelf
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65Terrigenous Continental Shelves--Key Features
- Sand ridges
- Cape retreat massifs
- Estuarine retreat massifs
- Paleo-shorelines
- Buried river valleys
- Scarps
- Mid-shelf deltas
66Relict morphologic elements of the Middle
Atlantic Bight, North America
Estuaries
Sand bodies Sand ridges
Relict deltas
67Proposed origin of some sand ridges
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77Carbonate Shelves
- Subpolar to tropical
- Absence of terrigenous influences
- Reefal, skeletal, or non-skeletal sediments
- Attached or non-attached
- Rimmed or ramps
78Schematic section across Great Bahama Bank from a
seismic profile
79Carbonates can dominate where terrigenous input
is minimal
80Sediment transport to the deep sea
81Slopes
- Sediment gravity processes active
- Canyons
- may feed submarine fans
- rivers discharge at canyon heads during sea level
lowstands - Slumps, slump blocks, slides
- may generate turbidity currents
- Turbidity flows
- turbidites - primary sedimentary deposit
- predictable vertical sequence of primary
sedimentary structures--Bouma Sequence
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88Submarine Fan
- Major sediment accumulation at base of slope
- Fed by canyon system turbidity currents and
debris flows can no longer entrain sediments - Similar features as rivers
- levees, meandering systems
- Repository of great mountain systems
- E.g., Bengal Fan
89Bengal Fan
90BENGALFAN
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94Sediment Drifts-Contourites
- Western boundary currents rework turbidites,
which are redeposited as large mounds of
fine-grained materials - High sedimentation rates, have great
paleoceanographic record
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97Location Map of ODP Leg 194
NMP Northern Marion Platform SMP Southern
Marion Platform
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99Food for thought by the end of this series of
lectures
- Given any continental shelf/margin worldwide, you
should be able to give a first-order explanation
of - What kind of margin occurs there
- What kinds of sediments occur there, e.g.,
- Deltaic
- Relict siliciclastic
- Carbonate (lectures on carbonates will come
later) - Mixed carbonate/siliciclastic
100Reading assignments
- The Open University (either edition) Waves, Tides
and Shallow-Water Processes. - Chapter 7. Deltas
- Chapter 8. Shelf Seas
- Seibold, E. and W. Berger (any of the 3 editions)
The Sea Floor - Chapter 3. Sources and compositions of marine
sediments - Chapter 4. Effects of waves and currents
101Reading assignment for next Tuesday
- Seibold, E. and W. Berger (any of the 3 editions)
The Sea Floor - Chapters 6, 7 and Appendix 9