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Channel-levee evolution in combined contour current–turbidity current flows from flume-tank experiments
Author(s) -
Elda Miramontes,
Joris T. Eggenhuisen,
Ricardo Silva Jacinto,
Giovanni Poneti,
Florian Pohl,
Alexandre Normandeau,
D C Campbell,
F. Javier HernándezMolina
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
geology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.609
H-Index - 215
eISSN - 1943-2682
pISSN - 0091-7613
DOI - 10.1130/g47111.1
Subject(s) - turbidity current , geology , flume , current (fluid) , levee , contour line , contourite , channel (broadcasting) , bedform , turbidite , sedimentary rock , geomorphology , sediment transport , sedimentary depositional environment , sediment , geotechnical engineering , geometry , structural basin , flow (mathematics) , paleontology , oceanography , meteorology , mathematics , physics , engineering , electrical engineering
Turbidity currents and contour currents are common sedimentary and oceanographic processes in deep-marine settings that affect continental margins worldwide. Their simultaneous interaction can form asymmetric and unidirectionally migrating channels, which can lead to opposite interpretations of paleocontour current direction: channels migrating against the contour current or in the direction of the contour current. In this study, we performed three-dimensional flume-tank experiments of the synchronous interaction between contour currents and turbidity currents to understand the effect of these combined currents on channel architecture and evolution. Our results show that contour currents with a velocity of 10–19 cm s−1 can substantially deflect the direction of turbidity currents with a maximum velocity of 76–96 cm s−1, and modify the channel-levee system architecture. A lateral and nearly stationary front formed on the levee located upstream of the contour current, reduced overspill and thus restrained the development of a levee on this side of the channel. Sediment was preferentially carried out of the channel at the flank located downstream of the contour current. An increase in contour-current velocity resulted in an increase in channel-levee asymmetry, with the development of a wider levee and more abundant bedforms downstream of the contour current. This asymmetric deposition along the channel suggests that the direction of long-term migration of the channel form should go against the direction of the contour current due to levee growth downstream of the contour current, in agreement with one of the previously proposed conceptual models.

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