Mediterranean bottom current deposits: an example from the Southwestern Adriatic Margin
Capitolo di libro
Data di Pubblicazione:
2007
Abstract:
The identification of bottom-current deposits is a key to understanding the long-term
deep-sea circulation and its changes through geological times. The Southwestern Adriatic
Margin (SAM) is a small Mediterranean sub-basin that represents a key site to study bottomcurrent
deposits in a Mediterranean context and hence to improve our knowledge of changes in
Mediterranean deep-water circulation during the recent geological past. The SAM is characterized
by complex stratification and circulation related to an interaction between two south-flowing
bottom water masses: the cold North Adriatic Dense Water (NAdDW), formed in the shallow
northern Adriatic through cold wind forcing and winter heat loss, and the highly saline Levantine
Intermediate Water (LIW), generated in the Eastern Mediterranean through intense evaporation
and flowing along the slope in a depth range of 200-600 m. Chirp-sonar profiles, TOBI
mosaics and sediment cores acquired along the SAM reveal distinctive sediment drift types
(elongated, plastered and isolated drifts) and extensive fields of sediment waves. Non-depositional
and erosional features related to bottom-current activity include moats between drifts and the steep
slope, widespread upper-slope erosional areas and extensive furrowed areas, which are particularly
developed where change in slope orientation blocks the current circulation. The distribution,
morphology and size of bottom-current features along the SAM result from an interaction between
current regime and slope morphology, characterized by structural highs perpendicular to the slope
contour (e.g. Dauno Seamount), multiple slope incisions (e.g. Bail Canyon and slump scars) and
extensive block-slide deposits. Morphobathymetric and seismic stratigraphic data on the SAM
show that bottom-current deposits are best developed where the regional slope flattens seaward
of a very steep, often erosional, upper slope. The roughness of the lower slope, in particular,
seems to correlate with the complexity and decreasing size of the bottom-current deposits.
Like other land-locked basins, the Adriatic underwent dramatic palaeogeographical and palaeoceanographic
rearrangements during the Late Quaternary sea-level oscillations. Indeed, during
the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), most of the areas where NAdDW is formed today were
subaerially exposed. Concurrently, during glacial times the LIW production was probably
reduced compared with the present-day conditions. The SAM slope is a key site to study the
impact of changing current regime on late Quaternary slope deposits. Other Mediterranean late
Quaternary contourite deposits are either in water depths compatible with the LIW, particularly
in the case of shallow sill basins (e.g. Sicily, Corsica Channel), or at the slope base reflecting
the flow of Mediterranean deep waters. The SAM bottom-current deposits, instead, seems to
record the changing interaction between two distinctive bottom-hugging currents along the
same pathway.
Tipologia CRIS:
02.01 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
Elenco autori:
Verdicchio, Giuseppe; Asioli, Alessandra; Trincardi, Fabio
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Titolo del libro:
Economic and Paleoceanographic Significance of Contourite Deposits
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