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Sedimentation in Cascadia Deep-Sea Channel

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Cascadia Channel is the most extensive deep-sea channel known in the Pacific Ocean and extends across Cascadia Basin, through Blanco Fracture Zone, and onto Tufts Abyssal Plain this paper.
Abstract
Cascadia Channel is the most extensive deep-sea channel known in the Pacific Ocean and extends across Cascadia Basin, through Blanco Fracture Zone, and onto Tufts Abyssal Plain. The channel is believed to be more than 2200 km in length and has a gradually decreasing gradient averaging 1:1000. Maximum channel relief reaches 300 m on the abyssal plain and 1100 m in the mountains of the fracture zone. The right (north and west) bank is consistently about 30 m higher than the left (south and east). Turbidity currents have deposited thick, olive-green silt sequences throughout upper and lower Cascadia Channel during Holocene time. The sediment is derived primarily from the Columbia River and is transported to the channel through Willapa Canyon. A cyclic alternation of the silt sequences and thin layers of hemipelagic gray clay extends at least 650 km along the channel axis. Similar Holocene sequences which are thinner and finer grained, occur on the walls and levees of the upper channel and indicate that turbidity currents have risen high above the channel floor to deposit their characteristic sediments. A thin surficial covering of Holocene sediment along the middle channel demonstrates the erosional or non-depositional nature of the turbidity currents in this area. The Holocene turbidity current deposits are graded texturally and compositionally, and contain Foraminifera from neritic, bathyal, and abyssal depths which have been size-sorted. A sequence of sedimentary structures occurs in the deposits similar to that found by Bouma in turbidites exposed on the continent. There is a sharp break in the textural and compositional properties of each graded bed. The coarser grained, basal zone of each bed represents deposition from the traction load; the finer grained, organic-rich, upper portion of each graded bed represents deposition from the suspension load. Individual turbidity current sequences are thinnest in the upper and thickest in the lower channel. Recurrence intervals between flows range from 400 years in the upper to 1500 years along portions of the lower channel. Evidently each flow recorded near shore did not extend its entire length. Turbidity currents have reached heights of at least 117 m and spread laterally 17 km from the channel axis. Calculated flow velocities range from 5.8 m/sec along the upper channel to 3.3 m/sec along the lower portion. Pleistocene turbidity currents within Cascadia Basin were much more extensive areally than the Holocene flows, and they deposited sediment which was coarser and cleaner. Pronounced levees which border the upper channel are due chiefly to Pleistocene overflow. Coarse gravels and ice-rafted pebbly clays were also deposited along Cascadia Channel during Pleistocene time.

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Recurrence Intervals for Great Earthquakes of the Past 3,500 Years at Northeastern Willapa Bay, Washington

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used radiocarbon and stratigraphic correlation of buried soils along the Niawiakum and Willapa rivers to confirm the timing of large Cascadia earthquakes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Paleoseismicity of the Cascadia Subduction Zone: Evidence from turbidites off the Oregon‐Washington Margin

John Adams
- 01 Aug 1990 - 
TL;DR: Cascadia turbidite data demonstrate that the near-term hazard of a great earthquake on the Cascadia subduction zone is of the order of 2-10% in the next 50 years as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deep-water fine-grained sediments: facies models

TL;DR: In this paper, three main facies groups related to depositional processes are identified: turbidites, contourites, and pelagites/hemipelagites, based on a large amount of published data and stimulated by the discussion at the International Workshop on Fine-Grained Sediments held in Halifax, Canada in August 1982.
Journal ArticleDOI

Holocene earthquake records from the cascadia subduction zone and northern san andreas fault based on precise dating of offshore turbidites

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present preliminary evidence for a ∼10,000-year earthquake record from two major fault systems based on sediment cores collected along the continental margins of western North America, and extend the record of past earthquakes to the base of the Holocene (at least 9800 years ago), during which 18 events correlate along the same region.
Journal ArticleDOI

A physical model for the transport and sorting of fine‐grained sediment by turbidity currents

TL;DR: In this article, a physically consistent physical model for transport and sorting in muddy turbidity currents has been proposed, based on textural analysis of individual silt laminae and hydraulic sorting.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mineralogy and Sedimentation of Recent Deep-Sea Clay in the Atlantic Ocean and Adjacent Seas and Oceans

TL;DR: In this article, the relative abundances of montmorillonite, illite, kaolinite, chlorite, gibbsite, pyrophyllite, mixed-layer clay minerals, feldspars, and dolomite were determined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experiments on density and turbidity currents: iii. deposition of sediment

TL;DR: Turbidity currents were formed by releasing suspensions of plastic beads (density 152, median diameter 1.8mm) from a lock into a horizontal water-filled flume as discussed by the authors.
Book

Submarine canyons and other sea valleys

TL;DR: A new book that many people really want to read will you be one of them? Of course, you should be as mentioned in this paper, even some people think that reading is a hard to do, you must be sure that you can do it.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experiments on density and turbidity currents, I.Motion of the head

TL;DR: In this article, two series of experiments were performed in a lucite flume 5 meters long, 50 cm deep, and 15.4 cm wide, where the first series saline density currents were formed by pumping salt solutions at constant...
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