Origin of shore-normal channels from the shoreface of Sable Island, Canada

被引:19
|
作者
Amos, CL
Li, MZ
Chiocci, FL
La Monica, GB
Cappucci, S
King, EH
Corbani, F
机构
[1] Southampton Oceanog Ctr, Sch Ocean & Earth Sci, Southampton SO14 3ZH, Hants, England
[2] Geol Survey Canada Atlantic, Bedford Inst Oceanog, Dartmouth, NS, Canada
[3] Univ Roma La Sapienza, Dipartimento Sci Terra, Rome, Italy
[4] Univ Parma, Dipartimento Sci Terra, I-43100 Parma, Italy
关键词
gutters; shore face-connected ridges; sand transport; storm erosion;
D O I
10.1029/2001JC001259
中图分类号
P7 [海洋学];
学科分类号
0707 ;
摘要
[1] A suite of modern, shore-normal channels was discovered on the southern shoreface of Sable Island, Canada. Repetitive multibeam and side scan surveys of these features, as well as box coring and sampling, showed that the depressions were perennial features of the shoreface. They occurred in fine and medium sand and were most abundant indepths less than 20 m. They were up to 1 m deep and 50 m wide, increased in size seawards, and generally followed the seabed slope. The channels dominated the inner shoreface becoming wider and deeper seawards to depths in excess of 40 m. There is a continuum of scales in width and depth of these channels, the smallest of which are equated with gutters preserved in the geological record. The internal structure of the shoreface sediments where the gutters are found is characterized by normally graded tempestites composed of cut-and-fill structures overlying an erosion surface. Thus, the environmental setting, internal structure, and scale are similar to ancient counterparts. Gutters have been interpreted to result from downwelling over palaeo-shorefaces during ancient storms [Myrow, 1992b]. The composition of gutter infill, as well as the stability, evolution, associated bed forms, and hydrodynamic conditions under which they formed, were examined to verify genetic interpretations of the ancient counterparts. The multisensor benthic lander RALPH was deployed within a field of shore normal channels for 17 days during late winter 1998. RALPH burst-sampled flow at hourly intervals while imaging the seabed. Resulting sequential imagery revealed the genesis of a group of five gutters during storm spin-down that was coincident with the formation of large-scale wave ripples. This was followed by infilling of the gutters and wave ripple destruction within 20 hours by longshore sand transport. The gutters were located within, and parallel to, a larger channel (50 m wide and 0.50 m deep). They were formed by coastal set-up and subsequent downwelling that was triggered by the rotation of storm winds from seawards (onshore wind) to landwards (offshore wind). The gutters formed within 2-3 hours during spin-down of a winter storm under "live-bed'' conditions of sand transport. Wave height and mean tidal flows were well below those of the storm peak and so they were not directly responsible for creating the gutters. The mechanism we propose for the evolution of gutters supports the geological interpretations; that is, a storm-driven, downwelling event as described by Swift and Niedoroda [1985]. However, the downwelling event appeared to take place suddenly (rapid acceleration in flow), briefly (few hours duration), and within narrow corridors guided by wider and deeper channels of the shoreface. High turbidity during the time of gutter formation leads us to believe that the phenomenon of inner shelf turbidity currents [as suggested by Walker, 1985] exists and may be instrumental in channel formation.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 16 条
  • [1] Erosion and deposition on migrating shoreface-attached ridges, Sable island, eastern Canada
    Dalrymple, RW
    Hoogendoorn, EL
    GEOSCIENCE CANADA, 1997, 24 (01) : 25 - 36
  • [2] A Numerical Study of Geomorphic and Oceanographic Controls on Wave-Driven Runup on Fringing Reefs with Shore-Normal Channels
    Storlazzi, Curt D.
    Rey, Annouk E.
    van Dongeren, Ap R.
    JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2022, 10 (06)
  • [3] Morphology, lateral migration, and internal structures of shoreface-connected ridges, Sable Island Bank, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    Hoogendoorn, E.L.
    Dalrymple, R.W.
    Geology, 1986, 14 (05) : 400 - 403
  • [4] Distinguishing Late Holocene Storm Deposit From Shore-normal Beach Sediments From the Gulf of Thailand
    Kongsen, Stapana
    Phantuwongraj, Sumet
    Choowong, Montri
    FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE, 2021, 9
  • [5] Genetic diversity in a feral horse population from Sable Island, Canada
    Plante, Yves
    Vega-Pla, Jose Luis
    Lucas, Zoe
    Colling, Dave
    De March, Brigitte
    Buchanan, Fiona
    JOURNAL OF HEREDITY, 2007, 98 (06) : 594 - 602
  • [6] New records of mites (Arachnida: acari) from sable island, nova scotia, Canada
    Majka, Christopher G.
    Behan-Pelletier, Valerie
    Bajerlein, Daria
    Bloszyk, Jerzy
    Krantz, Gerald W.
    Lucas, Zoe
    OConnor, Barry
    Smith, Ian M.
    CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST, 2007, 139 (05): : 690 - 699
  • [7] High quality pre-stack migrated radar images of several fixed-offset passes along a shore-normal profile on Marambaia Barrier Island
    Martins, Saulo S.
    Gomes, Ellen N. S.
    Travassos, Jandyr M.
    Mansur, Webe J.
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED GEOPHYSICS, 2020, 172
  • [8] DISPERSION AND FATE OF OILED DRILL CUTTINGS DISCHARGED FROM 2 EXPLORATION WELLS NEAR SABLE ISLAND, CANADA
    YUNKER, MB
    DRINNAN, RW
    SMYTH, TA
    OIL & CHEMICAL POLLUTION, 1990, 7 (04): : 299 - 316
  • [10] Origin of gases and waters from a hypersaline, carbonate spring on Anticosti Island, Quebec, Canada
    Daoust, Pascale
    Clark, Ian D.
    Desrochers, Andre
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 2023, 60 (11) : 1530 - 1543