Title: Diapositive 1
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2Introduction
- Turbidites geological formations that have their
origins in turbidity currents deposits, that
deposit from a form of underwater avalanche that
are responsible for distributing vast amounts of
clastic sediment into the deep ocean.
- Sediments are transported and deposited by
density flow, not by tractional or frictional
flow. - Bouma sequence from conglomerates at the bottom
to shales on the top
Idealised sequence of sedimentary textures and
structures in a classical turbidite, or Bouma
sequence (Bouma, 1962).
3Introduction
- Interest of the off-fault paleoseismology
- GPS ? high degree of certainty, in few years, of
the crustal strain accumulation.. But just for a
portion of a cycle.. - Earthquake records ? not long enough
- Onshore paleoseismology ? erosion, urban area..
- Off-fault paleoseismology
- Interest of marine turbidite records
- Have to prove they are earthquake-triggered
- Marine records more continuous, extend further
back in time, more precise in time (datable
foraminifera) - Method used
- 74 piston, gravity cores from channel/canyon
systems draining Northern California - Mapping channels with multibeam sonar
(bathymetry, channel morphology, sedimentation
patterns - Sampled all major channel systems between
Mendocino and north of Monterey Bay - Results
- Good agreement with shorter land record
- Opportunity to investigate long tem earthquake
behaviour of North San Andreas Fault
4Piston core removed from corer
Piston corer
Split piston core being subsampled.
http//oceanworld.tamu.edu/students/forams/forams_
piston_coring.htm
5- 4 segments of SAF
- Santa Cruz Mountains
- Peninsula
- North Coast
- Offshore
- Several onshore paleoseismic sites
- Vedanta max slip rate in late Holocene 24 /-
3mm/yr and 210 /- 40 years - Fort Ross 230 yr
- South of the Golden Gate 17 mm/yr
6How to identify earthquake-triggered turbidites
- Possible causes of turbidites
- Storm or tsunami wave loading
- Sediment loading
- Storm discharges
- Earthquakes
- Seismically triggered turbidites are different
- Wide area extent
- Multiple coarse fraction pulses
- Variable provenance
- Greater depositional volume
- Use a temporal and spatial pattern of event
correlation over 320 km of coastline
7Synchronous triggering and correlative
deposition of turbidites
- Regional stratigraphic datum missing
- Correlations depend on stratigraphic correlations
of other datums and radiocarbon ages - The Confluence Test
- If one canyon contains n turbidites and a second
canyon also shows n turbidites, and if these n
events have been independently triggered, the
channel below the confluence should contain at
least 2n instead of only n. - 8 major confluences
- 3 heavy minerals
8Event fingerprinting
- All cores are scanned, collecting P-wave
velocity, gamma-ray density, magnetic
susceptibility data, imaged with X-radio and
grain size analyzed
9Event fingerprint
- First, these data were used to correlate
stratigraphy between cores at a single site - Found that it was possible to correlate unique
physical property signatures of individual
turbidites from different sites within the same
channel - Even possible to correlate turbidites between
different channels (some of which never met) - The turbidite fingerprint basis of
long-distance correlations
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11Event fingerprint
Evolution of a single event down channel over a
distance of 74 km
12Radiocarbon analysis
- Extraction of planktic foraminifera from the
hemipelagic sediment below each turbidite - Bioturbation and basal erosion do not biase 14C
ages - Method
- Determine hemipelagic thickness
- Estimate the degree of basal erosion
- Observe that differential erosion is most likely
source of variability at any site - Conversion of hemipelagic thickness to time
(using average of sedimentation rate)
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14Results
Both have 22 events
Less dated turbidites Low foram abundance
Upper section poorly preserved
15Results confluence and mineralogy
- Good correlation between these cores suggests
that input mixing at each confluence has little
effect on the stratigraphy of the turbidites - Synchronous triggering is the only viable
explanation - Non-synchronous triggering should produce an
amalgamated record that increases in complexity
below each confluence, with only partial
correlations for the synchronous events - Strict test of synchroneity
16Results stratigraphic correlation
Regional correlation of turbidite stratigraphy
spanning the Holocene
17Results stratigraphic correlation
Noyo canyon is cut by the NSAF and as an
epicentral distance of zero ? explains thicker
turbidite records
18Time series
- -The youngest 15 events have a mean repeat time
of 200 yr / 60 yr - 95 yr minimum interval
- 270 yr maximum value
- Values consistent with previous paleoseismic data
onshore - Same total number of events onshore and offshore
land and marine record the same events
19Discussion
- Good correspondence with land paleoseismic dates
(individual matching, total number of events) - Offshore turbidites as paleoseismic indicators
for the NSAF - Mean recurrence interval coherent with onshore
- Epicentral distance is the controlling factor for
turbidite size - Turbidites correlate across channels where the
mineralogy is different, the physiography is
different the sediment sources are different and
the underlying geology is different too - Minimum magnitude and triggering distance from
the earthquake hypocenter at least M7.4 - But observations of turbidites of small events
may also be a function of the resolutions of the
observations - Majority of repeat time intervals between 150 and
250 yr