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submarine slides

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Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 18 July 2022
Geology (2022) 50 (10): 1130–1134.
...Harya D. Nugraha; Christopher A.-L. Jackson; Howard D. Johnson; David M. Hodgson; Michael A. Clare Abstract Submarine slides (including slides, slumps, and debris flows) pose major geohazards by triggering tsunami and damaging essential submarine infrastructure. Slide volume, a key parameter...
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Journal Article
Published: 19 January 2016
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2016) 53 (11): 1177–1189.
... detachment a structure of interest. Failure to recognize the detachment would have led to serious misinterpretations of the stratigraphy and sedimentary facies relations. Hoffman and Hartz (1999) inferred that the Ombonde detachment formed as a submarine slide on the outer slope of a trench that became...
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Series: Geological Society, London, Memoirs
Published: 01 January 2016
EISBN: 9781862397088
... potential sites for the acquisition of sediment cores for the reconstruction of Late Quaternary environmental change. Finally, submarine slides may also cause tsunamis within fjords through water displacement during the sliding process. ...
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2010
Journal of the Geological Society (2010) 167 (3): 583–592.
.... Chiossi D. Fonseca Chaves F. Gomes de Sousa F. Lilletveit R. 2008a Large submarine slides on a steep and narrow continental margin (Camamu Basin, NE Brazil). Poster presented at AAPG Annual Convention, San Antonio, TX. Cobbold P.R. Gilchrist G. Chiossi D. Fonseca Chaves...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1993
AAPG Bulletin (1993) 77 (6): 1064–1081.
...Robert A. Morton ABSTRACT Large submarine slides and associated shelf-margin embayments represent an intermediate member in the continuum of unstable shelf-margin features. On seismic profiles, they may resemble submarine canyons, but are different in their size, morphology, origin, and hydrocarbon...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1985
Journal of the Geological Society (1985) 142 (3): 555–565.
... 1983 126 Parkinson D. The Carboniferous succession in the Slaidburn district, Yorkshire J geol Soc London 1936 92 294 331 Prior D. B. Bornhold B. P. Coleman J. M. Bryant W. R. Morphology of a submarine slide, Kitman Area, British Columbia Geology 1982 10 588...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1967
AAPG Bulletin (1967) 51 (4): 569–578.
...E. Robinson ABSTRACT In the Eocene White Limestone Group at Lloyds, southeastern Jamaica, submarine sliding has brought layers of coarse clastic carbonate and non-carbonate material into a sequence of planktonic foraminiferal micrite. It is concluded that there were no nearby land areas at the time...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1955
AAPG Bulletin (1955) 39 (10): 2053–2067.
... from the breaking-off of submarine escarpments caused by vertical tectonic displacements along the edges of the Barquisimeto trough. This material is thought to have moved by gravitational sliding toward the center of the trough; it has been encountered at distances of at least 30 kilometers from its...
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Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 09 February 2018
Geology (2018) 46 (4): 331–334.
...Morelia Urlaub; Jacob Geersen; Sebastian Krastel; Tilmann Schwenk Abstract Numerous studies invoke weak layers to explain the occurrence of submarine mega-slides (>100 km 3 ), in particular those on very gentle slopes (<3°). Failure conditions are thought to be met only within this layer...
FIGURES
Series: GSA Special Papers
Published: 01 January 1984
DOI: 10.1130/SPE198-p81
... Modern submarine sediment slides produce two features: a slide scar that delineates a zone of removal and a deposit of slide material. The upturned edges of the slide scar form prominent scarps with relief of generally less than 100 m. The zone of deposition includes “hummocky,” “blocky...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 November 1982
Geology (1982) 10 (11): 588–592.
...David B. Prior; Brian D. Bornhold; James M. Coleman; William R. Bryant Abstract A digitally acquired, scale-corrected side-scan sonar survey yielded high-resolution imagery of a submarine landslide in British Columbia. The landslide, in a fjord-head setting at Kitimat, was last active in 1975...
Series: GSA Reviews in Engineering Geology
Published: 01 January 1977
DOI: 10.1130/REG3-p137
EISBN: 9780813758039
... Abstract Analyses of high-resolution seismic profiles have revealed the presence of a well-defined, massive submarine slide located at the north end of the Kayak Trough in the northern Gulf of Alaska. This slide is about 18 km long and 15 km wide, has a volume of about 5.9 km 3 , and has moved...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1970
AAPG Bulletin (1970) 54 (1): 125–128.
... of displacement accompanying their deposition are comparable to the size and displacement of previously described submarine slumps and slide deposits. Compared to findings in previous submarine reflection studies, this deposit is unique in its total lack of coherent internal reflectors. Diapirs and reef...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 November 1957
GSA Bulletin (1957) 68 (11): 1569–1576.
Image
Schematic diagram showing stages of development of submarine slides. (A) Deposition of siliceous chalk. (B) Deposition of calcareous ooze and opal-A–opal-CT conversion. (C) Polygonal faults, fluid migration, and excess pore-pressure generation. (D) Emplacement of regionally distributed slides. (E) Vph, density, water content, and void ratio curves at Ocean Drilling Program Site 762 reveal potential sliding surface (Hs). Vph—p-wave velocity; e—symbol of void ratio; H—seismic horizon; SU—seismic unit; mbsf—meters below seafloor.
Published: 02 December 2022
Figure 4. Schematic diagram showing stages of development of submarine slides. (A) Deposition of siliceous chalk. (B) Deposition of calcareous ooze and opal-A–opal-CT conversion. (C) Polygonal faults, fluid migration, and excess pore-pressure generation. (D) Emplacement of regionally distributed
Image
▴ Significant landslides since 1900. Open circles indicate submarine slides, and triangles are volcanic flank collapse events. Cumulative volumes from multiple earthquake-induced slides are indicated by crosses (after Keefer 1984).
Published: 01 March 2012
Figure 1. ▴ Significant landslides since 1900. Open circles indicate submarine slides, and triangles are volcanic flank collapse events. Cumulative volumes from multiple earthquake-induced slides are indicated by crosses (after Keefer 1984 ).
Journal Article
Journal: Interpretation
Published: 26 October 2020
Interpretation (2020) 8 (4): SR37–SR44.
... of seismic attributes to interpret large submarine slide blocks on the North Slope, Alaska. Results show that the slide blocks appear as mounds with scarps associated with them on the seismic section. The slide blocks vary in size, depending on their distance away from the shelf. The pattern of the slide...
Journal Article
Published: 31 March 2017
Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology (2017) 50 (2): 148–157.
...B. N. Madhusudhan; M. A. Clare; C. R. I. Clayton; J. E. Hunt Abstract The Atlantic Frontier Environmental Network (AFEN) submarine slide complex is located 95 km NW of the Shetland Islands, at a water depth of c. 1000 m. It is thought to have occurred some 2800 years ago. The slide complex is c. 4...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1957
GSA Bulletin (1957) 68 (1): 55–94.
... perpendicular to regional trends, unrelated to tectonic structure of older formations in the area or to its own cleavage. Submarine slides are inferred, possibly from a thrust fault scarp to the east or northeast. This sequence of rocks is complexly folded and sheared, with greater intensity near the major...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1974
GSA Bulletin (1974) 85 (5): 781–784.
...WILLIAM R. NORMARK Abstract Ranger submarine slide sheet on the upper continental slope of the Pacific margin of the Baja California, Mexico, peninsula covers more than 300 km 2 . The slide involved nearly 2 × 10 10 m 3 of partially indurated, late Pliocene and younger (?) hemipelagic muds which...