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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Journal of Sedimentary Research (SEPM)

Abstract


Journal of Sedimentary Research
Vol. 85 (2015), No. 9. (September), Pages 1058-1081
Research Articles

Deep-Water Previous HitSedimentNext Hit Bypass

Christopher J. Stevenson, Christopher A.-L. Jackson, David M. Hodgson, Stephen M. Hubbard, Joris T. Eggenhuisen

Abstract

Submarine gravity flows are a key process for transporting large volumes of Previous HitsedimentNext Hit from the continents to the deep sea. The Previous HitlocationNext Hit, volume, and character of the Previous HitsedimentNext Hit bypassed by these flows dictates the areal extent and Previous HitthicknessNext Hit of the associated deposits. Despite its importance, Previous HitsedimentNext Hit bypass is poorly understood in terms of flow processes and the associated stratigraphic expression. We first examine the relationships between the physical parameters that govern bypass in flows, before assessing the variable stratigraphic expression of bypass from modern seafloor, outcrop, and subsurface datasets. Theoretical and numerical approaches distinguish grain size, slope, flow size, and Previous HitsedimentNext Hit concentration as parameters that exert major controls on flow bypass. From Previous HitfieldNext Hit data, a suite of criteria are established to recognize bypass in the geological record. We identify four bypass-dominated zones, each of which is associated with a set of diagnostic criteria: slope-channel bypass, slope-bypass from mass wasting events, base-of-slope bypass, and basin-floor bypass. As the expression of bypass varies spatially and is dependent on the scale of observation, a range of scale-dependent criteria are required for robust interpretation of these zones in the Previous HitfieldNext Hit or subsurface. This synthesis of deep-water Previous HitsedimentNext Hit bypass highlights the challenge in quantitatively linking process with product. The establishment of criteria to recognize Previous HitsedimentTop bypass, qualitatively linked with flow processes, is an important step towards improving our understanding of submarine flow dynamics and resultant stratigraphic architecture.


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