Document of bibliographic reference 302087

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Book chapters
BibLvlCode
AMS
Title
Contourite facies of the Faro Drift, Gulf of Cadiz
Abstract
The Faro Drift is an elongate sediment body (50 km long, 300 m thick) that parallels the northern margin of the Gulf of Cadiz south of Portugal. On the basis of location, morphology and seismic character of the drift together with bottom photographs, sediment distribution and the known regional oceanography, we can be certain that the Faro Drift was constructed by bottom currents related to the deep outflow of Mediterranean water. Detailed study of a closely-spaced suite of cores has therefore allowed characterization of the sediments into three contourite facies: sands and silts, mottled silts and muds, and homogeneous muds. The first is equivalent to the sandy contourites and the two others to the muddy contourites of earlier studies. These three facies are arranged in irregular vertical ‘sequences’ that reflect long-term variations in bottom current velocity. They are distinctly different from typical fine-grained turbidite and hemipelagite facies.
Bibliographic citation
Gonthier, E.G.; Faugeres, J.-C.; Stow, D.A.V. (1984). Contourite facies of the Faro Drift, Gulf of Cadiz, in: Stow, D.A.V. et al. Fine-grained Sediments: deep-water processes and facies. Geological Society Special Publication, 15: pp. 275-292. https://dx.doi.org/10.1144/gsl.sp.1984.015.01.18

Authors

author
author
Name
Jean-Claude Faugeres
author
Name
Dorrik Stow

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1144/gsl.sp.1984.015.01.18

Document metadata

date created
2018-10-16
date modified
2018-10-16