The Northwest Atlantic Mid-Ocean Channel of the Labrador Sea. V. Sedimentology of a giant deep-sea channel
- 1 August 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
- Vol. 24 (8) , 1595-1624
- https://doi.org/10.1139/e87-155
Abstract
The Northwest Atlantic Mid-Ocean Channel (NAMOC) is one of the largest deep-sea channels of the world's oceans. During the late Cenozoic glacial period, the channel played a major role in the depositional history of the Labrador Sea and northwest Atlantic in controlling sedimentation of a broad (approx. 500 m thick and 200 km wide) lens of turbidites. This sediment sequence interfingers laterally with the acoustically transparent pelagic and contourite facies found in the Labrador Basin. The meandering channel is a depositional–erosional feature formed by submarine mass flows, predominantly turbidity currents.The channel contains a meandering talweg that appears to be associated with a sequence of submarine point bars containing thick-bedded, coarse-grained turbidites and gravel layers (channel-fill facies). Old channel positions on seismic profiles indicate that the channel has migrated laterally up to 30 km both to the west and to the east.Natural levees flank the channel for its entire length, extending laterally into turbidite plains 60–100 km wide. The spill-over facies comprises thin-bedded, fine-grained turbidites dominated by thinly laminated muds. Individual units of parallel-laminated mud, which result from single turbidity currents overtopping the channel banks, average 3 cm in thickness. A layer by layer correlation of a sequence of spill-over turbidites is possible between two adjacent cores 70 km apart. Coarse-grained off-channel sediments recently discovered on both levees at distances up to 55 km from the NAMOC occur in tributary channels.Turbidity current activity in the channel probably started with the onset of glaciation at about mid-Pliocene time and ceased at about 7000 years BP, when deglaciation proceeded rapidly. The sedimentation rate for the last episode of overbank deposition on the levees, which probably occurred between 11 000 and 7000 years BP, is 13 cm/1000 years. Towards the end of glacial episodes the northwestern Labrador Sea was probably covered with sea ice.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Northwest Atlantic Mid-Ocean Channel of the Labrador Sea. IV. Petrography and provenance of the sedimentsCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1987
- Bengal Fan, Indian OceanPublished by Springer Nature ,1985
- Monterey Fan: Growth pattern control by basin morphology and changing sea levelsGeo-Marine Letters, 1983
- Evidence of pre-late Wisconsinan glaciations on Labrador Shelf – Cartwright Saddle regionCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1983
- Northern Labrador Shelf glacial chronology and depositional environmentsCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1982
- Morphology and Structure of the Southern Labrador SeaCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1975
- The Continental Margin Off Labrador and Eastern Newfoundland–Morphology and GeologyCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1972
- The Northwest Atlantic Mid-Ocean CanyonCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1969
- Deep-Sea Channels, Topography, and SedimentationAAPG Bulletin, 1955
- Nomenclature Based on Sand-silt-clay RatiosJournal of Sedimentary Research, 1954