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Sedimentology of Seismo-Turbidites off the Cascadia and Northern California Active Tectonic Continental Margins, Northwest Pacific Ocean

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Title Sedimentology of Seismo-Turbidites off the Cascadia and Northern California Active Tectonic Continental Margins, Northwest Pacific Ocean
Names Gutierrez-Pastor, Julia (creator)
Nelson, C. Hans (creator)
Goldfinger, Chris (creator)
Escutia, Carlota (creator)
Date Issued 2013-02-01 (iso8601)
Note This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published article is copyrighted by Elsevier and can be found at: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/marine-geology/.
Abstract Holocene turbidites from turbidite channel systems along the active tectonic continental
margins of the Cascadia Subduction Zone (offshore Vancouver Island to Mendocino Triple
Junction) and the northern San Andreas Transform Fault (the Triple Junction to San Francisco
Bay), have been analyzed for sedimentologic features related to their seismic origin. Centimeter
thick silt/sand beds (turbidite base) capped by mud layers (turbidite tail) and interbedded with
hemipelagic silty clay intervals with high biogenic content have been characterized by visual
core descriptions, grain-size analysis, x-ray radiographs and physical properties.

Along the northern California margin in upstream single tributary canyons and channels,
most turbidites are uni–pulsed (classic fining up) whereas downstream below multiple tributary
canyon and channel confluences, most deposits are stacked turbidites. Because each set of
stacked turbidites has no hemipelagic sediment between each turbidite unit and each unit has a
distinct mineralogy from a different tributary canyon, we interpret that a stacked turbidite is
deposited by several coeval turbidity currents fed by multiple tributary canyons and channels
with synchronous triggering from a single San Andreas Fault earthquake.

The Cascadia margin is characterized by individual multi-pulsed turbidites that contain
multiple coarse-grained sub-units without hemipelagic sediment between pulses.
Because the number and character of multiple coarse-grained pulses for each correlative multipulsed
turbidite is almost always constant both upstream and downstream in different channel
systems for 600 km along the margin, we interpret that the earthquake shaking or aftershock
signature is usually preserved, for the much stronger Cascadia (≥9 Mw) compared to weaker
California (≥8 Mw) earthquakes, which result in upstream uni-pulsed turbidites and
downstream stacked turbidites. Consequently, both the strongest (≥9 Mw) great earthquakes
and downstream confluences cause multi- pulsed and stacked turbidites that are typical for
seismo-turbidites generated by a single great earthquake. Along both margins, earthquake
triggering and multi-pulsed or stacked turbidites become an alternative explanation for
amalgamated turbidite beds in active tectonic margins and show that multiple grain-size pulses
and reverse grading are not unique criteria for hyperpycnites, thalweg levee turbidites, or minibasin
margin turbidites.

The analyses of the turbidites along the Cascadia and northern California margins reveal
common sedimentologic characteristics of turbidites triggered by great earthquakes that can be
used to distinguish seismo-turbidites in other active tectonic margins around the world.
Genre Article
Topic seismo-turbidite
Identifier Gutierrez-Pastor, Julia, Nelson, C. Hans, Goldfinger, Chris, Escutia, Carlota, Sedimentology of Seismo-Turbidites off the Cascadia and Northern California Active Tectonic Continental Margins, Northwest Pacific Ocean, Marine Geology (2013), doi: 10.1016/j.margeo.2012.11.010

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