Earth Science in the Urban Ocean: The Southern California Continental Borderland

Submarine landslides of the Southern California Borderland
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Published:January 01, 2009
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CiteCitation
Homa J. Lee, H. Gary Greene, Brian D. Edwards, Michael A. Fisher, William R. Normark, 2009. "Submarine landslides of the Southern California Borderland", Earth Science in the Urban Ocean: The Southern California Continental Borderland, Homa J. Lee, William R. Normark
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Conventional bathymetry, sidescan-sonar and seismic-reflection data, and recent, multibeam surveys of large parts of the Southern California Borderland disclose the presence of numerous submarine landslides. Most of these features are fairly small, with lateral dimensions less than ~2 km. In areas where multibeam surveys are available, only two large landslide complexes were identified on the mainland slope— Goleta slide in Santa Barbara Channel and Palos Verdes debris avalanche on the San Pedro Escarpment south of Palos Verdes Peninsula. Both of these complexes indicate repeated recurrences of catastrophic slope failure. Recurrence intervals are not well constrained but appear to be in...
- acoustical methods
- bathymetry
- California
- continental borderland
- continental margin
- continental slope
- debris avalanches
- earthquakes
- East Pacific
- failures
- fluid pressure
- geologic hazards
- geophysical methods
- geophysical profiles
- geophysical surveys
- Los Angeles County California
- marine environment
- mass movements
- multichannel methods
- North Pacific
- Northeast Pacific
- Pacific Ocean
- Palos Verdes Peninsula
- prediction
- recurrence interval
- reflection methods
- San Pedro Basin
- Santa Barbara Basin
- Santa Barbara Channel
- Santa Monica Basin
- seismic methods
- seismic profiles
- slope stability
- slumping
- sonar methods
- Southern California
- submarine environment
- surveys
- United States
- Goleta Slide