Integrating seismic-stratigraphy with eco-lithologic data from PRAD1-2, central Adriatic margin. Implications on sea level and tectonic subsidence during the last 450 kyr.
Poster
Data di Pubblicazione:
2006
Abstract:
Relative sea level change can be driven by cyclical or impulsive phenomena. In some
cases, cyclical events such as glacial-eustatic sea level changes, may shape the sedimentary
record in a way that a typical motif can be recognised. However, regional
setting and local environmental factors, superimposed on glacio-eustasy, may alter the
cyclical pattern of stratigraphic trends. On the Adriatic shelf, four middle-upper Pleistocene
depositional sequences (named sequence 1 to sequence 4, top-down) show evident
stratigraphic similarities resulting from re-iteration of comparable depositional
conditions during sea level cycles reflecting 100 kyr astronomical pacing. The 71 mlong
PRAD1-2 borehole, 184 m below sea level on the central Adriatic slope, provides
evidence of an overall upward-fining lithologic trend within the four sequences. This
trend and the evidence of more frequent cm-thick silt and sand beds at the top of sequence
4, indicates a longer-term lithologic variability on the background of periodic,
climate-driven sea level changes.
Each of the four sequences on the Adriatic margin consists of progradational units
recording highstand and falling sea level (e.g. forced-regression deposits). During successive
steps of relative sea level fall, near-shore sandy facies within shoreline deposits
are cannibalised and coarse sediment is temporarily stored on the top-sets of each successive
forced-regression wedge punctuating sea level fall, before it is delivered to the
lowstand shoreline. Depending on supply (amount of available coarse-grained sediment)
and wave-current regime, offshore sand sheets and sand bars may form in equilibrium
with nearshore sand deposits; however, in low-energy, low-gradient, and overall
mud-dominated environments, sand facies are more likely restricted to nearshore
deposits. Because of narrowing of the shelf during lowstand, relatively coarser sediment
is more easily dispersed on the outer shelf and upper slope by storms or density
currents.
Silt and fine sand layers of the kind found at the base of PRAD1-2 likely record
episodic silt and sand escaping a nearby shoreline and depositing on an outer shelf environment.
However, the higher frequency of these coarser deposits within sequence
4, combined with seismic evidence of erosional truncation of this sequence in a more
seaward location than in the case of younger sequences, suggests that the distance
between forced-regressive/lowstand shoreline and the site of PRAD1-2 was at a minimum
at the time of deposition sequence 4, and increased progressively during successive
cycles, determining a concomitant deepening of the depositional environment
at the PRAD1-2 site. A nearshore environment at the top of sequence 4 where the
sandy interval occurs is also confirmed by benthic foraminifera assemblages indicative
of water depths around 20 m. On this basis, significant changes in the amplitude
of sea level oscillations or long-term tectonic subsidence (or a combination of both)
may have been responsible for the observed changes in the sedimentary facies and
depositional environment. We discuss on the implications of possible scenarios
Tipologia CRIS:
04.03 Poster in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
Late Quaternary; seismic stratigraphy; Adriatic; subsidence
Elenco autori:
Piva, Andrea; Asioli, Alessandra; Ridente, Domenico; Trincardi, Fabio
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: