Contourite characterization and its discrimination from other deep‐water deposits in the Gulf of Cadiz contourite depositional system
DATE:
2020-12-18
UNIVERSAL IDENTIFIER: http://hdl.handle.net/11093/3136
EDITED VERSION: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/sed.12813
DOCUMENT TYPE: article
ABSTRACT
Despite numerous efforts to properly differentiate between contourites and
other deep-water deposits in cores and outcrops, reliable diagnostic criteria
are still lacking. The co-occurrence of downslope and along-slope sedimentary
processes makes it particularly difficult to differentiate these relatively
homogeneous deposits. The main aim of this paper is to identify differences
in deep-water sediments based on Principal Component Analysis of grain
size and geochemistry, sedimentary facies, and reinforced by microfacies
and ichnofacies. The sediments studied were obtained from two International
Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 339 sites in mounded and sheeted
drifts in the Gulf of Cadiz. The statistical approach led to the discernment of
hemipelagites, silty contourites, sandy contourites, bottom current reworked
sands, fine-grained turbidites and debrites over a range of depositional and
physiographic elements. These elements are linked to contourite drifts, the
drift-channel transition, the contourite channel and distal upper slope.
When bottom currents or gravity-driven flows are not the dominant depositional
process, marine productivity and continental input settling forms the
main depositional mechanism in deep-water environments. This is reflected
by a high variability of the first principal component in hemipelagic deposits.
The stacked principal component variability of these deposits evidences
that the contourite drift and the adjacent contourite channel were influenced
by the interrelation of hemipelagic, gravitational and bottom current induced
depositional processes. This interrelation questions the paradigm that a drift
is made up solely of muddy sediments. The interrelation of sedimentary processes
is a consequence of the precession-driven changes in the intensity of
the Mediterranean Outflow Water related to Mediterranean climate variability,
which are punctuated by millennial-scale variability. Associated vertical
and lateral shifts of the Mediterranean Outflow Water, and therefore of its
interface with the East North Atlantic Central Water, controlled sediment
input and favoured turbulent sediment transport in the middle slope. During