浊流
峡谷
地质学
浊度
沉积物
海底扩张
泥沙输移
浊积岩
海底峡谷
地貌学
海洋学
沉积沉积环境
构造盆地
作者
Peter J. Talling,Matthieu Cartigny,Ed Pope,Megan L. Baker,Michael Clare,Maarten Heijnen,Sophie Hage,Daniel R. Parsons,Stephen M. Simmons,Charlie K. Paull,R. Gwiazda,D. Gwyn Lintern,John E. Clark,Jingping Xu,Ricardo Silva Jacinto,K. L. Maier
标识
DOI:10.1038/s43017-023-00458-1
摘要
Seafloor sediment flows, called turbidity currents, form the largest sediment accumulations, deepest canyons and longest channels on Earth. It was once thought that turbidity currents were impractical to measure in action, especially given their ability to damage sensors in their path, but direct monitoring since the mid-2010s has measured them in detail. In this Review, we summarize knowledge of turbidity currents gleaned from this direct monitoring. Monitoring identifies triggering mechanisms from dilute river plumes, and shows how rapid sediment accumulation can precondition slope failure, but the final triggers can be delayed and subtle. Turbidity currents are consistently more frequent than predicted by past sequence-stratigraphic models, including at sites >300 km from any coast. Faster flows (more than ~1.5 m s–1) are driven by a dense near-bed layer at their front, whereas slower flows are entirely dilute. This frontal layer sometimes erodes large (>2.5 km3) volumes of sediment, yet maintains a near-uniform speed, leading to a travelling-wave model. Monitoring shows that flows sculpt canyons and channels through fast-moving knickpoints, and shows how deposits originate. Emerging technologies with reduced cost and risk can lead to widespread monitoring of turbidity currents, so their sediment and carbon fluxes can be compared with other major global transport processes. Seafloor turbidity currents form Earth’s largest sediment accumulations, deepest canyons and longest channels, but their destructive nature makes them notoriously difficult to measure in action. This Review explores how insights from detailed direct measurements have advanced understanding of turbidity currents.
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