Document of bibliographic reference 201191

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Book chapters
BibLvlCode
AMS
Title
Contourite sedimentation in the Falkland Trough, western South Atlantic
Abstract
The Falkland Trough is a west-east bathymetric deep that separates the Falkland Plateau from the North Scotia Ridge in the western South Atlantic. It lies in the path of Circumpolar Deep Water flowing within the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC), and Weddell Sea Deep Water flowing beneath the ACC east of Shag Rocks passage. Marine geophysical and sediment core data demonstrate the influence of ambient bottom currents on deposition in this area, and reveal two styles of contourite sedimentation: (1) deposition of glauconite-rich sandy contourites in exposed areas of the Falkland Plateau and Falkland Trough, where vigorous ACC bottom currents control sedimentation, and (2) deposition of biogenic sandy contourites, muddy contourites and hemipelagites (western Falkland Trough), and muddy diatom ooze (eastern Falkland Trough), in the form of two elongate sediment drifts, which have developed in the presence of more sluggish bottom currents. The drift sediments contain a depositional record of bottom current flow through the glacial cycle (southern-origin bottom water flow in the east, and probably ACC flow in the west); analyses of core data from the western Falkland Trough suggest a reduction in bottom current strength during the Last Glacial Maximum at present depths of > 2500 m below sea level.
Bibliographic citation
Cunningham, A.R.; Howe, J.A.; Barker, P.F. (2002). Contourite sedimentation in the Falkland Trough, western South Atlantic, in: Stow, D.A.V. et al. Deep-water contourite systems: Modern drifts and ancient series, seismic and sedimentary characteristics. Geological Society Memoir, 22: pp. 337-352. https://dx.doi.org/10.1144/GSL.MEM.2002.022.01.24
Topic
Marine

Authors

author
Name
Alex Cunningham
author
author
Name
Peter Barker

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1144/GSL.MEM.2002.022.01.24

Document metadata

date created
2011-01-04
date modified
2018-10-16