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Giant sediment drifts on the continental rise west of the Antarctic Peninsula
Rebesco, M.; Larter, R.D.; Camerlenghi, A.; Barker, P.F. (1996). Giant sediment drifts on the continental rise west of the Antarctic Peninsula. Geo-Mar. Lett. 16(2): 65-75. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf02202600
In: Geo-Marine Letters. Springer: Heidelberg; Berlin. ISSN 0276-0460; e-ISSN 1432-1157, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Antarctica, Antarctic Peninsula
    Equipment > Remote sensing equipment > Sonar
    Properties > Physical properties > Turbidity
    Reflection > Seismic reflection
    Topographic features > Submarine features > Continental slope
    Antarctic Peninsula [Marine Regions]

Authors  Top 
  • Rebesco, M.
  • Larter, R.D.
  • Camerlenghi, A.
  • Barker, P.F.

Abstract
    Multichannel seismic reflection profiles from the continental rise west of the Antarctic Peninsula between 63° and 69°S show the growth of eight very large mound-shaped sedimentary bodies. MCS profiles and long-range side-scan sonar (GLORIA) images show the sea floor between mounds is traversed by channels originating in a dendritic pattern near the base of the continental slope. The mounds are interpreted as sediment drifts, constructed mainly from the fine-grained components of turbidity currents originating on the continental slope, entrained in a nepheloid layer within the ambient southwesterly bottom currents and redeposited downcurrent.

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