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The Storegga Slide: architecture, geometry and slide development

The Storegga Slide: architecture, geometry and slide development
The Storegga Slide: architecture, geometry and slide development
The detailed mapping of the Storegga Slide morphological elements and the analyses of the slide development are based on high-quality acoustic and sampling data sets acquired through a cooperation between academia and the petroleum industry. The Storegga Slide has affected an area of c. 95 000 km2 and a sediment volume of minimum 2400 km3 and maximum 3200 km3 has been displaced with c. 250 km3 deposited as turbidite sediments in the Norway Basin. This volume places the Storegga Slide event as one of the world largest exposed submarine slides. The Storegga Slide can be divided into six distinctive morphological provinces. Associated, and superimposed, on these provinces a total of 63 slide lobe phases have been identified and mapped. The morphological investigations have furthermore made it possible to generate a set of numerical values for statistical analysis of slide sediment rheology. This knowledge also makes it feasible to model the Storegga Slide. The analyses of the slide have revealed that the slide has developed through a retrogressive process starting most probably on the lower slope. The most likely location for initializing is in an area close to the Faroe–Shetland Escarpment.
Norwegian Sea, Holocene, submarine slide, debris flows, slide morphology, slide development
0025-3227
201-234
Haflidason, H.
ebb21efe-10de-485d-b77f-011b06f84a98
Sejrup, H.P.
ba2ab638-549b-46f0-ad31-37902940df40
Nygard, A.
f140c495-3945-4554-8f79-96001984365d
Mienert, J.
90ba1f28-5249-4663-ad09-b6abc8b46068
Bryn, P.
dc6d9abf-0f84-4414-ada2-456716e13165
Lien, R.
4b84c36f-83e7-4a40-8ce6-0930445beff9
Forsberg, C.F.
1876547d-d739-4398-8fe7-60139d5313c8
Berg, K.
0fa06d76-8917-40bb-b1fc-1a290454c1ff
Masson, D.
edd44c8b-38ca-45fb-8d0d-ac8365748a45
Haflidason, H.
ebb21efe-10de-485d-b77f-011b06f84a98
Sejrup, H.P.
ba2ab638-549b-46f0-ad31-37902940df40
Nygard, A.
f140c495-3945-4554-8f79-96001984365d
Mienert, J.
90ba1f28-5249-4663-ad09-b6abc8b46068
Bryn, P.
dc6d9abf-0f84-4414-ada2-456716e13165
Lien, R.
4b84c36f-83e7-4a40-8ce6-0930445beff9
Forsberg, C.F.
1876547d-d739-4398-8fe7-60139d5313c8
Berg, K.
0fa06d76-8917-40bb-b1fc-1a290454c1ff
Masson, D.
edd44c8b-38ca-45fb-8d0d-ac8365748a45

Haflidason, H., Sejrup, H.P., Nygard, A., Mienert, J., Bryn, P., Lien, R., Forsberg, C.F., Berg, K. and Masson, D. (2004) The Storegga Slide: architecture, geometry and slide development. Marine Geology, 213 (1-4), 201-234. (doi:10.1016/j.margeo.2004.10.007).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The detailed mapping of the Storegga Slide morphological elements and the analyses of the slide development are based on high-quality acoustic and sampling data sets acquired through a cooperation between academia and the petroleum industry. The Storegga Slide has affected an area of c. 95 000 km2 and a sediment volume of minimum 2400 km3 and maximum 3200 km3 has been displaced with c. 250 km3 deposited as turbidite sediments in the Norway Basin. This volume places the Storegga Slide event as one of the world largest exposed submarine slides. The Storegga Slide can be divided into six distinctive morphological provinces. Associated, and superimposed, on these provinces a total of 63 slide lobe phases have been identified and mapped. The morphological investigations have furthermore made it possible to generate a set of numerical values for statistical analysis of slide sediment rheology. This knowledge also makes it feasible to model the Storegga Slide. The analyses of the slide have revealed that the slide has developed through a retrogressive process starting most probably on the lower slope. The most likely location for initializing is in an area close to the Faroe–Shetland Escarpment.

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More information

Published date: 2004
Keywords: Norwegian Sea, Holocene, submarine slide, debris flows, slide morphology, slide development

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 14883
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/14883
ISSN: 0025-3227
PURE UUID: 8471d04c-0d9b-4909-b80f-e6c455ca2646

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Date deposited: 17 Mar 2005
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:32

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Contributors

Author: H. Haflidason
Author: H.P. Sejrup
Author: A. Nygard
Author: J. Mienert
Author: P. Bryn
Author: R. Lien
Author: C.F. Forsberg
Author: K. Berg
Author: D. Masson

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