Recent morpho-sedimentary processes in Dove Basin, southern Scotia Sea, Antarctica: A basin-scale case of interaction between bottom currents and mass movements
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Lobo, F. J.; López Quirós, Adrián; Evangelinos, Dimitris; Rodríguez Fernández, José; Salabarnada, Ariadna; Maldonado, AndrésEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Scotia Sea Dove Basin Sub-bottom stratigraphy Contourites Gravity flows Weddell Sea Deep Water Antarctic Circumpolar Current
Date
2021-08-11Referencia bibliográfica
F.J. Lobo... [et al.]. Recent morpho-sedimentary processes in Dove Basin, southern Scotia Sea, Antarctica: A basin-scale case of interaction between bottom currents and mass movements, Marine Geology, Volume 441, 2021, 106598, ISSN 0025-3227, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2021.106598]
Sponsorship
Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation - European Union through FEDER funds CTM2014-60451-C2-1/2-P CTM2017-89711-C2-1/2-P CTM 2012-39599-C03 CGL2016-80445-R CTM2016-75129-C3-1-R CGL2015-74216-JINAbstract
Multibeam bathymetric imagery and acoustic sub-bottom profiles are used to reveal distribution patterns of subsurface
sedimentation in Dove Basin (Scotia Sea). The goals of the study are to determine the imprint of the
inflow of deep Antarctic water masses from the Weddell Sea into the Scotia Sea, to establish the factors driving
the styles of contourite deposition and to discern the relative contribution of alongslope versus downslope
processes to the construction of the uppermost late Quaternary sedimentary record in the basin.
The most significant morpho-sedimentary features in Dove Basin are linked to contouritic processes and to
mass movements. Plastered drifts on the flanks of the basin constitute the most common contouritic deposits.
Basement-controlled drifts on top of structural elevations are common along the central ridge, the central basin
plain and scattered along the basin flanks. Sheeted drifts occur on top of adjacent banks or are restricted to the
deep basin. In contrast, mounded drifts are poorly represented in Dove basin. A laterally extensive contouritic
channel runs along the central ridge. Contouritic channels are also identified in the upper parts of the lateral
banks and slopes. Numerous slide scars along the upper parts of the slopes evolve downslope into semitransparent
lens-shaped bodies, with occasional development of across-slope channels. Semitransparent lenses
occur intercalated within stratified deposits in the slopes of the basin, in the central ridge and in the deepest
basin plain.
The spatial arrangement of contouritic morphologies points to the influence of the water column structure and
the basin physiography. In the eastern sub-basin, two different fractions (lower and upper) of Weddell Sea Deep
Water (WSDW) leave an imprint on contourite deposits owing to the sloping interface between the two fractions.
Contouritic influence is more subdued in the western sub-basin, and limited to the imprint of the lower WSDW.
The upper parts of the surrounding banks are under the influence of deep-reaching Circumpolar waters (i.e.,
Lower Circumpolar Deep Water), which develops both depositional and erosional morphologies. The crosssection
V-shaped morphology of the basin and the common occurrence of structural highs drive the predominance
of plastered and basement-controlled drifts in the sediment record. The frequent alternation between
contourites and downslope gravity-flow deposits is likely due to different processes associated with oversteepening
in the basin, such as basement-controlled steep slopes, deformed drifts atop basement elevations,
and the development of thick contouritic piles. Dove Basin is an example of a basin without mounded, plastered
or mixed hybrid drifts in the transition between the lower slope and the deep basin, because the upper boundary
of the deepest water mass —the Weddell Sea Deep Water— flows shallower along the middle slope. This fact
underlines the relevance of the position and depth of water masses in shaping the morphology of the feet of
slopes along continental margins.