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Pliocene-Holocene contourite deposition under the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, western Falkland Trough, south Atlantic Ocean

Howe, John A.; Pudsey, Carol J.; Cunningham, Alex P.. 1997 Pliocene-Holocene contourite deposition under the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, western Falkland Trough, south Atlantic Ocean. Marine Geology, 138 (1-2). 27-50. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0025-3227(97)00005-4

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Abstract/Summary

The eastward-flowing Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) has influenced sedimentation on the slope and floor of the western Falkland Trough, where the axis of the current is topographically constrained. Deep-water flow (below 3000 m) has produced a symmetrical sediment drift on the trough floor, with non-depositional margins indicating higher current velocities at the base of slope. To the southeast of the Falkland Islands there is a gap in the North Scotia Ridge, north of which the floor of the trough is swept clean of sediment by the ACC. Both echo character mapping and GLORIA side-scan data indicate that currents follow the bathymetric contours along the slope, redistributing sediment and locally eroding furrows. From six cores on the drift and on the northern slope, two styles of contourite deposition have been identified. On the drift, Holocene biogenic sandy contourites overlie Last Glacial Maximum muddy contourites and fine-grained diatomaceous hemipelagites. Sedimentation rates here average 3–4 cm ka−1. The sandy contourites present in four of the cores from the sediment drift are sharply underlain by the finer-grained, diatomaceous hemipelagites. The lack of a coarsening upward sequence, commonly associated with an increase in current velocity may be indicative of high current activity eroding away the finer (negative) sequence. Pliocene and Mid-Pleistocene glaucony-rich sandy contourites containing radiolaria characterise the Falkland Plateau and the floor of the trough near the gap in the North Scotia Ridge. We suggest that the glaucony is derived from a combination of authigenic formation and erosion of locally outcropping Cretaceous and Tertiary strata; this is supported by dinoflagellate analysis. Sedimentation rates in these current-swept areas average < 1 cm ka−1.

Item Type: Publication - Article
Digital Object Identifier (DOI): https://doi.org/10.1016/S0025-3227(97)00005-4
Programmes: BAS Programmes > Pre 2000 programme
ISSN: 00253227
Additional Keywords: glacial, interglacial, Antarctic Circumpolar Current, glaucony, contourites
Date made live: 14 Sep 2016 08:58 +0 (UTC)
URI: https://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/514491

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