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Abstract

Mulder, T., and E. Chapron, 2011, Flood deposits in continental and marine environments: Character and significance, in R. M. Slatt and C. Zavala, eds., Sediment transfer from shelf to deep water—Revisiting the delivery system: AAPG Studies in Geology 61, p. 1–30.

DOI:10.1306/13271348St613436

Copyright copy2011 by The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.

Flood Deposits in Continental and Marine Environments: Character and Significance

Thierry Mulder,1 Emmanuel Chapron2

1Universite Bordeaux 1, Unite Mixte de Recherches (UMR), Environnements et Paleoenvironnements Oceaniques (EPOC), Talence, France
2Institut des Sciences de la Terre d'Orleans (ISTO), Universite d'Orleans, Institut National des Sciences de l'Univers (INSU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Orleans, France

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This represents UMR Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique 5805 Environnements et Paleoenvironnements Oceaniques contribution 1747. We thank David J.W. Piper for his constructive remarks on the manuscript.

ABSTRACT

This chapter focuses on the processes, character, and significance of hyperpycnal floods and their deposits (hyperpycnites) in the geologic record based on selected examples from modern environments, outcrops, sediment cores, and seismic reflection profiles.

For bed-load- or suspended-load-dominated hyperpycnites, the rating curve of a flood event can be predicted and is represented by a power-law relationship between discharge and load. Because of reconcentration processes in marine waters, rivers other than those considered dirty (high sediment concentration) may form hyperpycnal flows over long distances on the sea floor. Hyperpycnal floods generally have a meteorologic origin, but catastrophic hyperpycnal floods can also occur because of dam outburst in the catchment area of a river. In some cases, catastrophic floods are associated with earthquakes or volcanic activity. Both in marine and lacustrine environments, frequent and powerful hyperpycnal flows develop meandering channel levee systems and more distal basinal fan lobes.

Hyperpycnites are characterized by a coarsening-upward basal sequence formed during the rising limb of the flood (waxing flow) and a fining-upward upper sequence formed during the falling limb of the flood (waning flow). The lower sequence is not always preserved, so hyperpycnites may be difficult to distinguish from classical turbidites. The common occurrence of organic debris of continental origin at the base of deposits is an indicator of hyperpycnites.

In glacial valleys of mountain ranges, a large amount of clastic material can be deposited in large valley lakes or in fjords by frequent hyperpycnal flows. Both in lacustrine and marine environments, large hyperpycnal floods, which are sometimes catastrophic, are documented in association with significant environmental changes such as deglaciation of the continent or volcano-glacier interactions (jokulhlaup).

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