Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4680356 Earth and Planetary Science Letters 2007 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

Submarine slides have been instrumental in shaping the Late Neogene NE Atlantic continental margin. We document a margin setting north of 70°N capable of generating recurrent huge Pleistocene mass-movements. The 1.0–0.2 Ma old Bjørnøya Fan Slide Complex includes three buried mega-slides, which have left scars containing up to 500 m-thick debris units. The two largest slides may have had a retrogressive development, cover areas of the order of ∼ 120 × 103 km2, and involved ∼ 25 × 103 km3 of sediments. Thus, the failures involved an order of magnitude more sediment than the Storegga Slide, the world's largest exposed slide. The mega-slides occurred during the Northern Hemisphere Glaciations, characterized by greatly enhanced deposition rates leading to the construction of the 3-km-thick Bjørnøya Trough Mouth Fan that progressively loaded a softer Miocene–Oligocene substratum. This setting induced excess pore pressure and sediment instability, conditions favorable for sliding. External trigger mechanisms, such as earthquakes, may have facilitated the mass-wasting process.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
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