Multibeam bathymetry, high-resolution seismic profiles and seafloor samples have been analyzed to characterize depositional and erosional dynamics recorded pro-deltaic deposits and outer shelf sediments along of a sector of the NE Sicilian margin (southern Tyrrhenian Sea). The deltaic deposits cover an area of ca. 15 km2 in front of the Mazzarrà River, and are morphologically characterized by waveforms trending overall along strike and incised cross-strike gullies of variable length. The gullies are shallow and characterized by small, coaxial erosive scours in the inner-middle shelf, whereas they become larger and deeper in the outer shelf-upper slope, in relation to the marked increase of slope gradients at the shelf break. Here, the wider gullies are characterized by a frame of crescent-shaped bedforms interpreted as cyclic steps, indicating the occurrence of sedimentary gravity flows in supercritical regime. Prodelta waveforms are widespread between - 50 and - 120 m, with wave lengths of 34-110 m and wave heights of 0.5-3 m. Morphometric characterization and spatial distribution of the waveforms suggests a main role in their genesis played by hyperpycnal flows, although we cannot discard the possible effect of internal waves or slow deformation processes (i.e., creep). Depositional and erosional features similar to those observed on the seafloor are evident in the subsurface stratigraphy, revealing the onset and growth of the Mazzarrà Delta since the Last Glacial Maximum. The post-glacial sea level rise caused lateral shifts of the Mazzarrà River mouth controlling migration of depositional lobes and intensity of seafloor incision and sediment reworking, ultimately resulting in the observed wavy bedforms extending from the inner shelf to the upper slope.

Depositional and erosional bedforms in Late Pleistocene-Holocene pro-delta deposits of the Gulf of Patti (southern Tyrrhenian margin, Italy)

Ridente Domenico;Bosman Alessandro;Chiocci Francesco
2017

Abstract

Multibeam bathymetry, high-resolution seismic profiles and seafloor samples have been analyzed to characterize depositional and erosional dynamics recorded pro-deltaic deposits and outer shelf sediments along of a sector of the NE Sicilian margin (southern Tyrrhenian Sea). The deltaic deposits cover an area of ca. 15 km2 in front of the Mazzarrà River, and are morphologically characterized by waveforms trending overall along strike and incised cross-strike gullies of variable length. The gullies are shallow and characterized by small, coaxial erosive scours in the inner-middle shelf, whereas they become larger and deeper in the outer shelf-upper slope, in relation to the marked increase of slope gradients at the shelf break. Here, the wider gullies are characterized by a frame of crescent-shaped bedforms interpreted as cyclic steps, indicating the occurrence of sedimentary gravity flows in supercritical regime. Prodelta waveforms are widespread between - 50 and - 120 m, with wave lengths of 34-110 m and wave heights of 0.5-3 m. Morphometric characterization and spatial distribution of the waveforms suggests a main role in their genesis played by hyperpycnal flows, although we cannot discard the possible effect of internal waves or slow deformation processes (i.e., creep). Depositional and erosional features similar to those observed on the seafloor are evident in the subsurface stratigraphy, revealing the onset and growth of the Mazzarrà Delta since the Last Glacial Maximum. The post-glacial sea level rise caused lateral shifts of the Mazzarrà River mouth controlling migration of depositional lobes and intensity of seafloor incision and sediment reworking, ultimately resulting in the observed wavy bedforms extending from the inner shelf to the upper slope.
2017
Flash-floods
Gullies
Multibeam bathymetry
Seismic-stratigraphy
Waveforms
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/326924
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