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Quantification of tsunami-induced flows on a Mediterranean carbonate ramp reveals catastrophic evolution

Quantification of tsunami-induced flows on a Mediterranean carbonate ramp reveals catastrophic evolution
Quantification of tsunami-induced flows on a Mediterranean carbonate ramp reveals catastrophic evolution
Cool-water carbonates are the dominant limestones in the Mediterranean Basin since the Early Pliocene. Their deposition typically resulted in ramp morphologies due to high rates of resedimentation. Several such fossil carbonate ramps are characterised by a bimodal facies stacking pattern, where background deposition of subaqueous dune and/or tempestite deposits is repeatedly interrupted by anomalously thick sedimentary units, dominated by backset-stratification formed by supercritical flows. A multitude of exceptional triggers (e.g. storms, floods, tsunamis) have been invoked to explain the origin of these supercritical flows, which, in the absence of a quantitative analysis, remains speculative as yet. Here, for the first time, the catastrophic evolution of one such Mediterranean carbonate ramp, on Favignana Island (Italy), is quantified by combining 87Sr/86Sr dating, outcrop-based palaeoflow reconstructions and hydraulic calculations. We demonstrate that rare tsunami-induced flows, occurring on average once every 14 to 35 kyr, lasting a few hours only, deposited the anomalously thick backset-bedded units that form half of the sedimentary record. In between such events, cumulative two years of storm-induced flows deposited the remaining half of the succession by the stacking of subaqueous dunes. The two to four orders of magnitude difference in average recurrence period between the two flow types, and their associated sedimentation rates, emphasises the genetic differences between the two styles of deposition. In terms of sediment transport, the studied carbonate ramp was inactive for at least 99% of the time with gradual progradation during decennial to centennial storm activity. Carbonate ramp evolution attained a catastrophic signature by the contribution of rare tsunamis, producing short-lived, high-energy sediment gravity flows.
carbonate ramp, Mediterranean, tsunami, storm, supercritical flow, catastrophic evolution
0012-821X
192-204
Slootman, Arnoud
4584909d-3c55-4734-9628-42fdc22114e8
Cartigny, Matthieu J.B.
d252d7b1-16c6-47b1-bf86-8087070934ce
Moscariello, Andrea
042f5553-11f8-46f5-a6c3-514795153fb7
Chiaradia, Massimo
06a958b3-57a1-4d23-b800-0211cd200886
de Boer, Poppe L.
a2c25f87-f35a-4aa2-a491-23b41b4d4283
Slootman, Arnoud
4584909d-3c55-4734-9628-42fdc22114e8
Cartigny, Matthieu J.B.
d252d7b1-16c6-47b1-bf86-8087070934ce
Moscariello, Andrea
042f5553-11f8-46f5-a6c3-514795153fb7
Chiaradia, Massimo
06a958b3-57a1-4d23-b800-0211cd200886
de Boer, Poppe L.
a2c25f87-f35a-4aa2-a491-23b41b4d4283

Slootman, Arnoud, Cartigny, Matthieu J.B., Moscariello, Andrea, Chiaradia, Massimo and de Boer, Poppe L. (2016) Quantification of tsunami-induced flows on a Mediterranean carbonate ramp reveals catastrophic evolution. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 444, 192-204. (doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2016.03.052).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Cool-water carbonates are the dominant limestones in the Mediterranean Basin since the Early Pliocene. Their deposition typically resulted in ramp morphologies due to high rates of resedimentation. Several such fossil carbonate ramps are characterised by a bimodal facies stacking pattern, where background deposition of subaqueous dune and/or tempestite deposits is repeatedly interrupted by anomalously thick sedimentary units, dominated by backset-stratification formed by supercritical flows. A multitude of exceptional triggers (e.g. storms, floods, tsunamis) have been invoked to explain the origin of these supercritical flows, which, in the absence of a quantitative analysis, remains speculative as yet. Here, for the first time, the catastrophic evolution of one such Mediterranean carbonate ramp, on Favignana Island (Italy), is quantified by combining 87Sr/86Sr dating, outcrop-based palaeoflow reconstructions and hydraulic calculations. We demonstrate that rare tsunami-induced flows, occurring on average once every 14 to 35 kyr, lasting a few hours only, deposited the anomalously thick backset-bedded units that form half of the sedimentary record. In between such events, cumulative two years of storm-induced flows deposited the remaining half of the succession by the stacking of subaqueous dunes. The two to four orders of magnitude difference in average recurrence period between the two flow types, and their associated sedimentation rates, emphasises the genetic differences between the two styles of deposition. In terms of sediment transport, the studied carbonate ramp was inactive for at least 99% of the time with gradual progradation during decennial to centennial storm activity. Carbonate ramp evolution attained a catastrophic signature by the contribution of rare tsunamis, producing short-lived, high-energy sediment gravity flows.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 31 March 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 April 2016
Published date: 15 June 2016
Keywords: carbonate ramp, Mediterranean, tsunami, storm, supercritical flow, catastrophic evolution
Organisations: Marine Geoscience

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 394267
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/394267
ISSN: 0012-821X
PURE UUID: 7c3966f1-d4ed-485e-b705-71012a505cee

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Date deposited: 12 May 2016 12:32
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 00:19

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Contributors

Author: Arnoud Slootman
Author: Matthieu J.B. Cartigny
Author: Andrea Moscariello
Author: Massimo Chiaradia
Author: Poppe L. de Boer

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