Vertically stacked Gilbert-type deltas of Ventimiglia (NW Italy): The Pliocene record of an overfilled Messinian incised-Valley
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Abstract:
Overfilled incised valleys develop when the rate of sediment supply outpaces the rate of accommodation. An
overfilled incised valley presents simple or compound valley-fill architecture, depending on the depth of the
valley incision, compared with the height reached by the following sea-level rise.
The Ventimiglia incised valley, exposed on the Ligurian coast, north-western Mediterranean margin, presents
a spectacular example of compound incised-valley fill, developed in perennial "overfill" conditions. The valley
was subaerially incised during the Messinian Salinity Crisis and rapidly flooded by the sea at the beginning of
Pliocene, then filled by eleven coarse-grained Gilbert-type deltas during Early-Middle Pliocene time.
The basal Messinian unconformity is locally paved with subaerial scree breccias and bioclastic shallowmarine
sandstones, and blanketed by bathyal marls. These deposits record the lowstand, transgressive and
early-highstand systems tracts of the first valley-fill sequence. The subsequent progradation of Gilbert-type
deltas occurred in four stages, or depositional sequences, separated by transgressive marine-marl intervals.
Within each depositional sequence, the deltaic bodies display offlapping architecture, recording falling
shoreline trajectory, downward shifts in facies, and overall forced regression. The water depth and
accommodation in the inundated coastal valley was gradually decreasing with time. The reduced
accommodation allowed the youngest deltas to prograde out to the shelf edge, triggering mass collapses
and subsequent filling into the newly created slump scars. Some of the deltas probably acted as "canyonperched
deltas" and supplied sediment to the deep-water slope and floor of the Ligurian Basin.
The vertical stacking of Gilbert-type deltas is usually attributed, in tectonically active basins, to fault-related
subsidence pulses. In Ventimiglia, the accommodation was created by high-frequency eustatic sea-level rises
that, probably accompanied by climate controlled reductions in sediment supply, temporarily outpaced
uplift, leading to the development of multiple cycles of infill.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Gilbert-type delta; Overfilled incised valley; Messinian Salinity Crisis; Tectonic sedimentation
Elenco autori:
Asioli, Alessandra
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