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Mid- to Late Cenozoic canyon development on the eastern margin of the Rockall Trough, offshore Ireland

Mid- to Late Cenozoic canyon development on the eastern margin of the Rockall Trough, offshore Ireland
Mid- to Late Cenozoic canyon development on the eastern margin of the Rockall Trough, offshore Ireland
The sediment-undersupplied eastern margin of the Rockall Trough, west of Ireland, is incised by numerous canyons and slope failure features. Swath multibeam bathymetry has been integrated with 2D seismic profiles to constrain the Neogene evolution of the slope and its canyons. The morphology varies along the margin, with canyon heads located at mid-slope depths in the south but extending onto the shelf in the north. West of Porcupine Bank, slope gullies connect with a distributative channel system on the trough floor, while north of Porcupine Bank the basin floor is flat and featureless. Draped fault-blocks and deep structures exerted an important influence on slope gradients, canyon extent and geometry. A ‘bottom driven’ upslope–retrogressive slope failure mechanism is inferred for canyon formation. They were initiated by failure localisation following widespread slope rotation and instability linked to differential subsidence that produced a latest Eocene–early Oligocene (C30) regional unconformity. In the NE Rockall, where the greatest density of canyons occurs, a large mass failure wedge directly overlies the C30 surface and the seabed canyons have incised the upper part of the wedge. Axial profile data indicate that canyons in the NE Rockall Trough formed in Mid-Cenozoic times but were locally reutilised as sediment conduits during Plio-Pleistocene slope progradation.
Rockall Trough, canyons, slope failure, Cenozoic, undersupplied
0025-3227
113-132
Elliott, G.M.
a8d56318-2ac4-4d18-93bf-16e97d37e074
Shannon, P.M.
05ebf79a-885f-4dd5-9a3a-2bdfb63c8f98
Haughton, P.D.W.
05a79dc5-ebc5-46c5-b1b3-b816dbca57df
Praeg, D
67961aac-4bb9-4f03-b854-951a333bd266
O'Reilly, B.O.
290af708-8e07-4bf3-acba-662c3c062ff1
Elliott, G.M.
a8d56318-2ac4-4d18-93bf-16e97d37e074
Shannon, P.M.
05ebf79a-885f-4dd5-9a3a-2bdfb63c8f98
Haughton, P.D.W.
05a79dc5-ebc5-46c5-b1b3-b816dbca57df
Praeg, D
67961aac-4bb9-4f03-b854-951a333bd266
O'Reilly, B.O.
290af708-8e07-4bf3-acba-662c3c062ff1

Elliott, G.M., Shannon, P.M., Haughton, P.D.W., Praeg, D and O'Reilly, B.O. (2006) Mid- to Late Cenozoic canyon development on the eastern margin of the Rockall Trough, offshore Ireland. Marine Geology, 229 (3-4), 113-132. (doi:10.1016/j.margeo.2006.03.008).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The sediment-undersupplied eastern margin of the Rockall Trough, west of Ireland, is incised by numerous canyons and slope failure features. Swath multibeam bathymetry has been integrated with 2D seismic profiles to constrain the Neogene evolution of the slope and its canyons. The morphology varies along the margin, with canyon heads located at mid-slope depths in the south but extending onto the shelf in the north. West of Porcupine Bank, slope gullies connect with a distributative channel system on the trough floor, while north of Porcupine Bank the basin floor is flat and featureless. Draped fault-blocks and deep structures exerted an important influence on slope gradients, canyon extent and geometry. A ‘bottom driven’ upslope–retrogressive slope failure mechanism is inferred for canyon formation. They were initiated by failure localisation following widespread slope rotation and instability linked to differential subsidence that produced a latest Eocene–early Oligocene (C30) regional unconformity. In the NE Rockall, where the greatest density of canyons occurs, a large mass failure wedge directly overlies the C30 surface and the seabed canyons have incised the upper part of the wedge. Axial profile data indicate that canyons in the NE Rockall Trough formed in Mid-Cenozoic times but were locally reutilised as sediment conduits during Plio-Pleistocene slope progradation.

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More information

Published date: 2006
Keywords: Rockall Trough, canyons, slope failure, Cenozoic, undersupplied

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 41379
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/41379
ISSN: 0025-3227
PURE UUID: d78b992b-8d74-47a1-a224-725ae8cb7385

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Date deposited: 31 Aug 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 08:28

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Contributors

Author: G.M. Elliott
Author: P.M. Shannon
Author: P.D.W. Haughton
Author: D Praeg
Author: B.O. O'Reilly

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