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http://hdl.handle.net/10553/41839
Title: | A non-deltaic clinoform wedge fed by multiple sources off São Sebastião Island, southeastern Brazilian Shelf | Authors: | Vieira, Ivo Montoya Montes, I. Siegle, Eduardo Passos, Jorge Luiz Michaelovitch De Mahiques, Michel Lobo, Francisco José |
UNESCO Clasification: | 250607 Geomorfología 251010 Procesos litorales o sublitorales |
Keywords: | Clinoform wedge | Issue Date: | 2018 | Journal: | Geo-Marine Letters | Conference: | 35th International Geological Congress (IGC) | Abstract: | Sâo Sebastiâo Island (SSI) marks the latitudinal boundary between two sedimentological and geochemical provinces in the So Paulo Bight, an arc-shaped sector of the southeastern Brazilian Shelf. The island is separated from the continent by the narrow, deep So Sebastio Channel (SSC). A relatively thick sediment wedge-the So Sebastio Wedge (SSW)-has been formed offshore SSI. This study explores the possible genetic and evolutionary mechanisms of the wedge, bearing in mind that clinoform wedges can form at considerable distances from major fluvial sources. For that, a marine geological database has been interpreted comprising high-resolution seismic data, a surficial sediment map and several sediment cores, from which radiocarbon dates were obtained and sedimentation rates deduced. A wave model was also applied to obtain the dominant wave directions. The SSW is a wedge-shaped deposit, and its internal structure presents three seismic units. The two lowest are wedge shaped and arranged in a backstepping pattern. The most recent unit is mostly aggradational and can be divided into three seismic subunits. Sedimentological data show that at least the most recent unit is composed of a mixture of sands and silts. Modeled wave conditions indicate a major influence from southerly waves that are able to remobilize shelf sediments and to create a bypass sediment zone until the foreset of the deposit is reached at the water depths where the SSW is found. Taken together, these data suggest that the SSW formed through contributions from different sediment sources, and should be regarded as an intermediate case of a non-deltaic clinoform wedge. Sand transport in the area involves wind-driven currents passing through the SSC and sediment remobilization by energetic southerly waves. Fine-grained sediment is derived mostly from the joint contributions of many minor catchments located north of the island, and this sediment is later transported southwestward by the prevailing surface currents. The morphological obstacle presented by the island leads to current veering and subsequent sediment deposition. The internal architecture of the wedge indicates that its deposition was probably initiated during the last part of the postglacial transgression, but its present-day morphology is mostly a product of episodic highstand sedimentation that began under conditions of gently falling sea levels during the last 5 ka, after the Holocene glacio-eustatic maximum. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10553/41839 | ISSN: | 0276-0460 | DOI: | 10.1007/s00367-017-0516-4 | Source: | Geo-Marine Letters [ISSN 0276-0460], v. 38 (1), p. 63-81 |
Appears in Collections: | Artículos |
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