High-resolution marine geophysical surveys have revealed submarine geomorphological features whose origins remain debated offshore Cape Licosa (Tyrrhenian Sea, Italy). Remote and direct data collected within the CORSUB project identified a field of subcircular to polygonal mounded structures distributed between approximately 75 m and 90 m of water depth along a ridge. These bedforms were analyzed using multibeam bathymetry and backscatter data, side-scan sonar, subbottom profiling, and video observations. CHIRP profiles indicate that these morphologies occur above a rugged acoustic basement attributed to the Miocene Cilento Flysch, which is draped by a thin, discontinuous Holocene sedimentary cover. Morphometric analysis delineated 565 discrete features with average dimensions of 8.6 × 6.1 × 0.4 m and a prevailing northeast to southeast orientation. The features exhibit a distinctive high-reflectivity ring surrounding a lower-reflectivity core, producing a regular beehive-like seabed texture. Videos document a wavy-profiled seascape characterized by coarse-grained biogenic sediments, including abundant boxwork rhodoliths, and localized encrustations of coralline algae and bivalves on rocky outcrops. The data suggest that an inherited, complex paleo-topography of the Flysch substrate formed during subaerial exposure of the ridge at the Last Glacial Maximum. Holocene sedimentation draped this surface, involving both sediment accumulation driven by intense hydrodynamic activity and benthic colonization of sparse rocky substrates, thereby preserving this complexityand resulting in a wavy seafloor profile. These findings highlight the control of paleo-topography and post-glacial sedimentary dynamics in shaping mesophotic seabed morphology along Mediterranean continental shelves and in distinctive seabed landforms.
Unveiling the origin of enigmatic seabed morphologies on the Cape Licosa ridge (Italy)
Innangi SaraSecondo
Software
;Tonielli RenatoMethodology
;Aiello GemmaWriting – Original Draft Preparation
;Vernazzani DavideMethodology
;
2026
Abstract
High-resolution marine geophysical surveys have revealed submarine geomorphological features whose origins remain debated offshore Cape Licosa (Tyrrhenian Sea, Italy). Remote and direct data collected within the CORSUB project identified a field of subcircular to polygonal mounded structures distributed between approximately 75 m and 90 m of water depth along a ridge. These bedforms were analyzed using multibeam bathymetry and backscatter data, side-scan sonar, subbottom profiling, and video observations. CHIRP profiles indicate that these morphologies occur above a rugged acoustic basement attributed to the Miocene Cilento Flysch, which is draped by a thin, discontinuous Holocene sedimentary cover. Morphometric analysis delineated 565 discrete features with average dimensions of 8.6 × 6.1 × 0.4 m and a prevailing northeast to southeast orientation. The features exhibit a distinctive high-reflectivity ring surrounding a lower-reflectivity core, producing a regular beehive-like seabed texture. Videos document a wavy-profiled seascape characterized by coarse-grained biogenic sediments, including abundant boxwork rhodoliths, and localized encrustations of coralline algae and bivalves on rocky outcrops. The data suggest that an inherited, complex paleo-topography of the Flysch substrate formed during subaerial exposure of the ridge at the Last Glacial Maximum. Holocene sedimentation draped this surface, involving both sediment accumulation driven by intense hydrodynamic activity and benthic colonization of sparse rocky substrates, thereby preserving this complexityand resulting in a wavy seafloor profile. These findings highlight the control of paleo-topography and post-glacial sedimentary dynamics in shaping mesophotic seabed morphology along Mediterranean continental shelves and in distinctive seabed landforms.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


