Dakar Slide Offshore Senegal, NW-Africa: Interaction of Stacked Giant Mass Wasting Events and Canyon Evolution
Dakar Slide Offshore Senegal, NW-Africa: Interaction of Stacked Giant Mass Wasting Events and Canyon Evolution
Acoustic data reveal giant submarine slides offshore Senegal. The most prominent slide, named Dakar Slide, shows a headwall with a length of at least 100 km in water depths of 2,000–3,100 m. The slide is situated between two canyons, the Dakar Canyon in the north and the Diola Canyon in the south. Seismic data indicate a complex interaction of mass wasting and canyon evolution during the formation of this part of the continental margin. The northern sidewall of the Dakar Slide crosses the distal part of the Dakar Canyon, which was repeatedly destroyed and filled by slide deposits. The area above the headwall does not show major mass-wasting events though the slope gradient there is significantly steeper. The Dakar Slide is underlain by multiple giant mass transport deposits reaching back to Oligocene times.
Submarine landslide, Mass failure, Canyon, Seismic reflection
978-94-007-2161-6
177-188
Meyer, Mathias
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Geersen, Jacob
abcf5f76-3608-4322-ab54-7bfb8dfcaf2d
Krastel, Sebastian
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Schwenk, Tilmann
9be3d0b3-903f-4f29-abff-eb98f07a5735
Winkelmann, Daniel
3010f4e6-de67-44dc-9a73-65bc1111cd6c
2012
Meyer, Mathias
d6e858b6-1aa6-4732-84b9-917a5b00f3a7
Geersen, Jacob
abcf5f76-3608-4322-ab54-7bfb8dfcaf2d
Krastel, Sebastian
4d9bf243-610a-4875-8c03-cd975c9f8542
Schwenk, Tilmann
9be3d0b3-903f-4f29-abff-eb98f07a5735
Winkelmann, Daniel
3010f4e6-de67-44dc-9a73-65bc1111cd6c
Meyer, Mathias, Geersen, Jacob, Krastel, Sebastian, Schwenk, Tilmann and Winkelmann, Daniel
(2012)
Dakar Slide Offshore Senegal, NW-Africa: Interaction of Stacked Giant Mass Wasting Events and Canyon Evolution.
In,
Yamada, Yasuhiro, Kawamura, Kiichiro, Ikehara, Ken, Urgeles, Roger, Mosher, David, Chaytor, Jason and Strasser, Michael
(eds.)
Submarine Mass Movements and Their Consequences.
(Advances in Natural and Technological Hazards Research Series, 31)
Heidelberg, DE.
Springer, .
(doi:10.1007/978-94-007-2162-3_16).
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
Acoustic data reveal giant submarine slides offshore Senegal. The most prominent slide, named Dakar Slide, shows a headwall with a length of at least 100 km in water depths of 2,000–3,100 m. The slide is situated between two canyons, the Dakar Canyon in the north and the Diola Canyon in the south. Seismic data indicate a complex interaction of mass wasting and canyon evolution during the formation of this part of the continental margin. The northern sidewall of the Dakar Slide crosses the distal part of the Dakar Canyon, which was repeatedly destroyed and filled by slide deposits. The area above the headwall does not show major mass-wasting events though the slope gradient there is significantly steeper. The Dakar Slide is underlain by multiple giant mass transport deposits reaching back to Oligocene times.
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More information
Published date: 2012
Keywords:
Submarine landslide, Mass failure, Canyon, Seismic reflection
Organisations:
Geology & Geophysics
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 339029
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/339029
ISBN: 978-94-007-2161-6
PURE UUID: 1477c78a-b658-4525-8200-5d40367c7ef3
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 21 May 2012 13:26
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 11:08
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Contributors
Author:
Mathias Meyer
Author:
Jacob Geersen
Author:
Sebastian Krastel
Author:
Tilmann Schwenk
Author:
Daniel Winkelmann
Editor:
Yasuhiro Yamada
Editor:
Kiichiro Kawamura
Editor:
Ken Ikehara
Editor:
Roger Urgeles
Editor:
David Mosher
Editor:
Jason Chaytor
Editor:
Michael Strasser
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