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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    Keywords: Natural gas-Hydrates. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (501 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783030811860
    DDC: 553.285
    Language: English
    Note: Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- A History of Gas Hydrate Research -- 1 Gas Hydrate Research: From the Laboratory to the Pipeline -- Abstract -- 1.1 General Aspects -- 1.2 Experimental Hydrate Research -- 1.2.1 Multiscale Approach -- 1.2.2 Overview of Experimental Techniques -- 1.2.2.1 Small (Laboratory) Scale -- 1.2.2.2 Pilot Scale -- 1.3 Final Considerations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 2 Shallow Gas Hydrates Near 64° N, Off Mid-Norway: Concerns Regarding Drilling and Production Technologies -- Abstract -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 The Nyegga Gas Hydrate Location -- 2.2.1 General -- 2.2.2 The BSR -- 2.2.2.1 BSR-Related Drilling and Engineering Concerns -- 2.2.3 Complex Pockmarks -- 2.2.4 Hydrate Pingoes -- 2.2.4.1 A Qualitative Model for Hydrate Pingo Formation -- 2.2.5 Carbonate Rubble -- 2.2.6 Pockmark-, Carbonate Rubble-, and Pingo-Related Engineering Concerns -- 2.2.7 Unique Fauna -- 2.2.8 Fauna-Related Drilling and Engineering Concerns -- 2.2.9 Gas Chimneys -- 2.2.10 Gas-Chimney Related Drilling, Production, and Engineering Concerns -- 2.3 Husmus Geological Setting -- 2.3.1 General -- 2.3.2 The Shallow BSR at Husmus -- 2.3.3 Husmus-Related Drilling and Engineering Concerns -- 2.4 Ormen Lange Gas Seeping Event -- 2.4.1 Gas Seepage-Related Drilling and Engineering Concerns -- 2.5 Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 3 Finding and Using the World's Gas Hydrates -- Abstract -- 3.1 Introduction-The Location of Gas Hydrates Beneath the Seabed -- 3.2 History of Gas Hydrate Exploration and Global Assessments of Distribution -- 3.3 The Importance of Natural Gas Hydrates -- 3.3.1 The Role of Gas Hydrates in Climate Change -- 3.3.2 Hydrates as a Control on Benthic Ecosystems -- 3.3.3 The Role of Gas Hydrates in Slope Stability -- 3.3.4 Hydrates as a Future Energy Source. , 3.3.5 Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) in Gas Hydrate Reservoirs -- 3.4 Evidence of Submarine Gas Hydrates -- 3.4.1 Geophysical Evidence -- 3.4.2 Quantifying Hydrates Through Chemical Measurements of Cores -- 3.4.3 Borehole Logging -- 3.5 Gas Hydrates in the Solar System: Applying Lessons from Earth -- 3.6 Summary -- References -- Gas Hydrate Fundamentals -- 4 Seismic Rock Physics of Gas-Hydrate Bearing Sediments -- Abstract -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Dry-Rock Moduli -- 4.2.1 Elastic Moduli from Theoretical Models -- 4.2.2 Dry-Rock Elastic Moduli from Calibration -- 4.3 Effective-Fluid Model for Partial Saturation -- 4.4 Permeability -- 4.5 Attenuation -- 4.6 Seismic Velocities -- 4.7 Estimation of the Seismic Velocities and Attenuation -- 4.8 Conclusions -- References -- 5 Estimation of Gas Hydrates in the Pore Space of Sediments Using Inversion Methods -- Abstract -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Methods, Physical Properties and Microstructures Used for Hydrate Quantification -- 5.3 Strategy for Gas Hydrate Exploration and Quantification -- 5.4 Conclusions -- References -- 6 Electromagnetic Applications in Methane Hydrate Reservoirs -- Abstract -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Electrical Properties of Gas Hydrates -- 6.2.1 Saturation Estimates -- 6.3 Marine CSEM Principle -- 6.4 CSEM Data Interpretation -- 6.5 CSEM Instrumentation and Exploration History -- 6.5.1 Seafloor-Towed Systems -- 6.5.2 Deep-Towed Systems -- 6.5.3 Other Systems -- 6.6 Global Case Studies -- 6.7 Discussion and Conclusions -- References -- Gas Hydrate Drilling for Research and Natural Resources -- 7 Hydrate Ridge-A Gas Hydrate System in a Subduction Zone Setting -- Abstract -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Tectonic Setting -- 7.3 Stratigraphy and Structure -- 7.4 The Bottom Simulating Reflection Across Hydrate Ridge -- 7.5 Hydrate Occurrence and Distribution Within Hydrate Ridge. , 7.5.1 Hydrate Concentrations from Drilling -- 7.5.2 Inferred Hydrates and Free Gas Regionally Across Hydrate Ridge -- 7.6 Conclusions -- References -- 8 Northern Cascadia Margin Gas Hydrates-Regional Geophysical Surveying, IODP Drilling Leg 311 and Cabled Observatory Monitoring -- Abstract -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Regional Occurrences of Gas Hydrate Inferred from Remote Sensing Data -- 8.3 The Gas Hydrate Petroleum System for the Northern Cascadia Margin -- 8.4 Gas Hydrate Saturation Estimates -- 8.5 Gas Vents, Focused Fluid Flow and Shallow Gas Hydrates -- 8.6 Long-Term Observations -- 8.6.1 Gas Emissions at the Seafloor -- 8.6.2 Controlled-Source EM and Seafloor Compliance -- 8.6.3 Borehole In Situ Monitoring -- 8.7 Summary and Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 9 Accretionary Wedge Tectonics and Gas Hydrate Distribution in the Cascadia Forearc -- Abstract -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Data -- 9.3 Results -- 9.4 Summary -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 10 Bottom Simulating Reflections Below the Blake Ridge, Western North Atlantic Margin -- Abstract -- 10.1 Geologic Setting -- 10.2 A Brief History of Blake Ridge Gas Hydrate Research -- 10.3 Blake Ridge BSR Distribution, Character and Dynamics -- 10.3.1 A Dynamic BSR on the Eastern Flank of Blake Ridge -- 10.3.2 Gas Chimneys Extending from BSRs -- 10.3.3 The Role of Sediment Waves in Gas Migration from the BSR -- 10.3.4 The Blake Ridge Diapir -- 10.4 Unanswered Questions and Future Research -- References -- 11 A Review of the Exploration, Discovery and Characterization of Highly Concentrated Gas Hydrate Accumulations in Coarse-Grained Reservoir Systems Along the Eastern Continental Margin of India -- Abstract -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 India National Gas Hydrate Program-Scientific Drilling Expeditions -- 11.3 Representative Gas Hydrate Systems-Krishna-Godavari Basin. , 11.3.1 Krishna-Godavari Basin Geologic Setting -- 11.3.2 NGHP-02 Area C Gas Hydrate System -- 11.3.3 NGHP-02 Area B Gas Hydrate System -- 11.4 Summary -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 12 Ulleung Basin Gas Hydrate Drilling Expeditions, Korea: Lithologic Characteristics of Gas Hydrate-Bearing Sediments -- Abstract -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Geological Setting of the Ulleung Basin -- 12.3 Overview of the First and Second Ulleung Basin Gas Hydrate Drilling Expeditions (UBGH1 and 2) -- 12.4 Lithologic Characteristics of Gas Hydrate-Bearing Sediments in the Ulleung Basin -- 12.5 Summary -- References -- 13 Bottom Simulating Reflections in the South China Sea -- Abstract -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Geological Setting and Gas Hydrate Drilling Expeditions -- 13.3 The Characteristics of BSRs Within Various Sediment Environments -- 13.3.1 BSR and Cold Seeps in Taixinan Basin -- 13.3.2 BSRs in the Pearl River Mouth Basin -- 13.3.3 BSRs in the Qiongdongnan Basin -- 13.4 Well Log Anomalies of Different Types of Gas Hydrate -- 13.5 BSR Dynamics and Response to Fluid Migration -- 13.6 Summary -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 14 Gas Hydrate and Fluid-Related Seismic Indicators Across the Passive and Active Margins off SW Taiwan -- Abstract -- 14.1 Introduction -- 14.2 Geological Setting -- 14.3 Seismic Observations -- 14.3.1 Gas Accumulation -- 14.3.2 Fluid Migration -- 14.3.3 Presence of Gas Hydrate -- 14.4 Distribution of the Seismic Indicators and Implications for Understanding the Hydrate System -- 14.5 Summary -- References -- 15 Gas Hydrate Drilling in the Nankai Trough, Japan -- Abstract -- 15.1 Introduction -- 15.2 Discovery of Gas Hydrates and Early Expeditions in the Nankai Trough Area -- 15.3 MITI Exploratory Test Well: Nankai Trough (1999-2000) -- 15.4 METI Multi-well Exploratory Drilling Campaign and Resource Assessments. , 15.4.1 Drilling Operations and Achievements -- 15.4.2 Discovery of the Methane Hydrate Concentration Zone and Resource Assessments -- 15.5 Tests for Gas Production Undertaken in 2013 and 2017 -- 15.5.1 Gas Production Techniques and Site Selection -- 15.5.2 Drilled Boreholes and Data/Sample Acquisitions -- 15.5.3 Production Test Results and Findings -- 15.6 Other Gas Hydrate Occurrences and Resource Evaluation Results -- 15.7 Summary -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 16 Alaska North Slope Terrestrial Gas Hydrate Systems: Insights from Scientific Drilling -- Abstract -- 16.1 Introduction -- 16.2 Alaska North Slope Gas Hydrate Accumulations -- 16.3 Alaska North Slope Gas Hydrate Research Drilling Programs -- 16.3.1 Mount Elbert Gas Hydrate Stratigraphic Test Well -- 16.3.2 Iġnik Sikumi Gas Hydrate Production Test Well -- 16.3.3 Hydrate-01 Stratigraphic Test Well -- 16.4 Alaska North Slope Gas Hydrate Energy Assessments -- 16.5 Summary -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Arctic -- 17 Gas Hydrates on Alaskan Marine Margins -- Abstract -- 17.1 Introduction -- 17.2 Southeastern Alaskan Margin -- 17.3 Aleutian Arc -- 17.3.1 Eastern Aleutian Arc -- 17.3.2 Central Aleutian Arc -- 17.3.3 Western Aleutian Arc -- 17.3.4 Bering Sea -- 17.4 US Beaufort Sea -- 17.5 Summary -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 18 Gas Hydrate Related Bottom-Simulating Reflections Along the West-Svalbard Margin, Fram Strait -- Abstract -- 18.1 Introduction -- 18.2 Geological and Oceanographic Settings -- 18.2.1 Regional Tectonic Setting -- 18.2.2 Sedimentary Setting -- 18.2.3 Oceanographic Setting -- 18.3 BSR Distribution and Characteristics Within Various Sediment Types -- 18.3.1 Regional Extent of the BSRs -- 18.4 Evidence for Gas Migration from Deep and Shallow Sources -- 18.4.1 The Gas Sources -- 18.4.2 Vertical Fluid Migration Features -- 18.5 Inferred Gas Hydrate Distribution. , 18.6 BSR Dynamics and Response to Natural Changes in the Environment.
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  • 2
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Water ; Hydrology ; Cogeneration of electric power and heat ; Fossil fuels ; Physical geography ; Business ; Management science ; Gashydrate ; Simulation ; Sediment ; Kontinentalrand ; Methanhydrate
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: XXI, 514, C3 Seiten , Illustrationen, Karten
    Edition: Corrected Publication 2022
    ISBN: 3030811859 , 9783030811853
    DDC: 551.46
    Language: English
    Note: Literaturangaben
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham : Springer International Publishing | Cham : Imprint: Springer
    Keywords: Oceanography. ; Water. ; Fossil fuels. ; Physical geography. ; Business. ; Management science. ; Erde ; Kontinentalrand ; Gashydrate ; Offshore-Vorkommen ; Geologie ; Seismik ; Schelf ; Methanlagerstätte ; Erdgasgeologie ; Gashydrate ; Seismische Prospektion ; Vorkommen
    Description / Table of Contents: Part I. A History of gas hydrate research -- Chapter 1. Gas Hydrate Research: From the Laboratory to the Pipeline -- Chapter 2. Shallow gas hydrates near 64° N, off Mid-Norway: Concerns regarding drilling and production technologies -- Chapter 3. Finding and using the world’s gas hydrates -- Part II. Gas Hydrate Fundamentals -- Chapter 4. Seismic rock physics of gas-hydrate bearing sediments -- Chapter 5. Estimation of gas hydrates in the pore space of sediments using inversion methods -- Chapter 6. Electromagnetic applications in methane hydrate reservoirs -- Part III. Gas Hydrate Drilling for Research and Natural Resources -- Chapter 7. Hydrate Ridge - A gas hydrate system in a subduction zone setting -- Chapter 8. Northern Cascadia Margin gas hydrates – Regional geophysical surveying, IODP drilling Leg 311 and cabled observatory monitoring -- Chapter 9. Accretionary wedge tectonics and gas hydrate distribution in the Cascadia forearc -- Chapter 10. Bottom Simulating Reflections below the Blake Ridge, western North Atlantic Margin -- Chapter 11. A review of the exploration, discovery, and characterization of highly concentrated gas hydrate accumulations in coarse-grained reservoir systems along the Eastern Continental Margin of India -- Chapter 12. Ulleung Basin Gas Hydrate Drilling Expeditions, Korea: Lithologic characteristics of gas hydrate-bearing sediments -- Chapter 13. Bottom simulating reflections in the South China Sea -- Chapter 14. Gas hydrate and fluid related seismic indicators across the passive and active margins off SW Taiwan -- Chapter 15. Gas Hydrate Drilling in the Nankai Trough, Japan -- Chapter 16. Alaska North Slope Terrestrial Gas Hydrate Systems: Insights from Scientific Drilling -- Part IV -- Arctic -- Chapter 17. Gas Hydrates on Alaskan Marine Margins -- Chapter 18. Gas Hydrate related bottom-simulating reflections along the west-Svalbard margin, Fram Strait -- Chapter 19. Occurrence and distribution of bottom simulating reflections in the Barents Sea -- Chapter 20. Svyatogor Ridge - A gas hydrate system driven by crustal scale processes -- Chapter 21. Gas hydrate potential in the Kara Sea -- Part V. Greenland and Norwegian Sea -- Chapter 22. Geophysical indications of gas hydrate occurrence on the Greenland continental margins -- Chapter 23. Gas hydrates in the Norwegian Sea -- Part VI. North Atlantic. Chapter 24. U.S. Atlantic Margin Gas Hydrates -- Chapter 25. Gas Hydrates and submarine sediment mass failure: A case study from Sackville Spur, offshore Newfoundland -- Chapter 26. Bottom Simulating Reflections and Seismic Phase Reversals in the Gulf of Mexico -- Chapter 27. Insights into gas hydrate dynamics from 3D seismic data, offshore Mauritania -- Part VII. South Atlantic -- Chapter 28. Distribution and Character of Bottom Simulating Reflections in the Western Caribbean Offshore Guajira Peninsula, Colombia -- Chapter 29. Gas hydrate systems on the Brazilian continental margin -- Chapter 30. Gas hydrate on the southwest African continental margin -- Chapter 31. Shallow gas hydrates associated to pockmarks in the Northern Congo deep-sea fan, SW Africa -- Part VIII. Pacific -- Chapter 32. Gas hydrate-bearing province off eastern Sakhalin slope -- Chapter 33. Tectonic BSR Hypothesis in the Peruvian margin: A forgotten way to see marine gas hydrate systems at convergent margins -- Chapter 34. Gas hydrate and free gas along the Chilean Continental Margin -- Chapter 35. New Zealand’s Gas Hydrate Systems -- Part IX. Indic -- Chapter 36. First evidence of bottom simulation reflectors in the western Indian Ocean offshore Tanzania -- Part X. Mediterranean Sea -- Chapter 37. A Gas Hydrate System of Heterogenous Character in the Nile Deep-Sea Fan -- Part XI. Black Sea -- Chapter 38. Gas hydrate accumulations in the Black Sea -- Part XII. Lake Baikal -- Chapter 39. The position of gas hydrates in the sedimentary strata and in the geological structure of Lake Baikal -- Part XIII. Antarctic -- Chapter 40. Bottom Simulating Reflector in the western Ross Sea Antarctica -- Chapter 41. Bottom Simulating Reflectors along the Scan Basin, a deep-sea gateway between the Weddell Sea (Antarctica) and Scotia Sea -- Chapter 42. Bottom Simulating Reflections in Antarctica -- Part XIV. Where Gas Hydrate Dissociates Seafloor Microhabitats Flourish. Chapter 43. Integrating fine-scale habitat mapping and pore water analysis in cold seep research: A case study from the SW Barents Sea.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource(XXI, 515 p. 311 illus., 296 illus. in color.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2022.
    ISBN: 9783030811860
    Series Statement: Springer eBook Collection
    Language: English
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  • 4
  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Geo-marine letters 10 (1990), S. 23-30 
    ISSN: 1432-1157
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Detailed analysis of the morphology of Bacino Bannock, a deep-sea basin filled by a hypersaline brine, shows with unusual detail the effect on the ocean floor topography of the deformation and dissolution of a salt body under tectonic stress. Although salt diapirism occurs in the central part of the investigated area, the major cause of basin formation is dissolution of subsurface evaporites which creates negative relief that exceeds by about one order of magnitude the positive relief. The true shape of the deformed salt deposit is preserved as a result of the absence of a thick post-evaporites sedimentary cover.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1432-1157
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Multichannel seismic reflection profiles from the continental rise west of the Antarctic Peninsula between 63° and 69°S show the growth of eight very large mound-shaped sedimentary bodies. MCS profiles and long-range side-scan sonar (GLORIA) images show the sea floor between mounds is traversed by channels originating in a dendritic pattern near the base of the continental slope. The mounds are interpreted as sediment drifts, constructed mainly from the fine-grained components of turbidity currents originating on the continental slope, entrained in a nepheloid layer within the ambient southwesterly bottom currents and redeposited downcurrent.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2021-05-11
    Description: The Messinian salinity crisis (MSC) - the most abrupt, global-scale environmental change since the end of the Cretaceous – is widely associated with partial desiccation of the Mediterranean Sea. A major open question is the way normal marine conditions were abruptly restored at the end of the MSC. Here we use geological and geophysical data to identify an extensive, buried and chaotic sedimentary body deposited in the western Ionian Basin after the massive Messinian salts and before the Plio-Quaternary open-marine sedimentary sequence. We show that this body is consistent with the passage of a megaflood from the western to the eastern Mediterranean Sea via a south-eastern Sicilian gateway. Our findings provide evidence for a large amplitude drawdown in the Ionian Basin during the MSC, support the scenario of a Mediterranean-wide catastrophic flood at the end of the MSC, and suggest that the identified sedimentary body is the largest known megaflood deposit on Earth.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: text
    Format: text
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2014-03-11
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: We conduct the seismic signal analysis on vintage and recently collected multichannel seismic reflection profiles from the Ionian Basin to characterize the deep basin Messinian evaporites. These evaporites were deposited in deep and marginal Mediterranean sedimentary basins as a consequence of the “salinity crisis” between 5.97 and 5.33 Ma, a basin‐wide oceanographic and ecological crisis whose origin remains poorly understood. The seismic markers of the Messinian evaporites in the deep Mediterranean basins can be divided in two end‐members, one of which is the typical “trilogy” of gypsum and clastics (Lower Unit – LU), halite (Mobile Unit – MU) and upper anhydrite and marl layers (Upper Unit – UU) traced in the Western Mediterranean Basins. The other end‐member is a single MU unit subdivided in seven sub‐units by clastic interlayers located in the Levant Basin. The causes of these different seismic expressions of the Messinian salinity crisis (MSC) appear to be related to a morphological separation between the two basins by the structural regional sill of the Sicily Channel. With the aid of velocity analyses and seismic imaging via prestack migration in time and depth domains, we define for the first time the seismic signature of the Messinian evaporites in the deep Ionian Basin, which differs from the known end‐members. In addition, we identify different evaporitic depositional settings suggesting a laterally discontinuous deposition. With the information gathered we quantify the volume of evaporitic deposits in the deep Ionian Basin as 500,000 km3 ± 10%. This figure allows us to speculate that the total volume of salts in the Mediterranean basin is larger than commonly assumed. Different depositional units in the Ionian Basin suggest that during the MSC it was separated from the Western Mediterranean by physical thresholds, from the Po Plain/Northern Adriatic Basin, and the Levant Basin, likely reflecting different hydrological and climatic conditions. Finally, the evidence of erosional surfaces and V‐shaped valleys at the top of the MSC unit, together with sharp evaporites pinch out on evaporite‐free pre‐Messinian structural highs, suggest an extreme Messinian Stage 3 base level draw down in the Ionian Basin. Such evidence should be carefully evaluated in the light of Messinian and post‐Messinian vertical crustal movements in the area. The results of this study demonstrates the importance of extracting from seismic data the Messinian paleotopography, the paleomorphology and the detailed stratal architecture in the in order to advance in the understanding of the deep basins Messinian depositional environments. Highlights First description of a new type of deepwater Messinian salt giant in the Ionian Sea. First quantification of the Messinian salt volume in the Ionian Sea. New seismic evidence of erosional surfces and Lago Mare deposits in the deep Ionian Basin. Further evidence of sea level lowering during the Messinian Salinity Crisis. Evidence for a different, physically separated deepwater Messinian salt basins in the Mediterranean.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: About six million years ago, the Mediterranean Sea underwent a period of isolation from the ocean and widespread salt deposition known as the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC), allegedly leading to a kilometer-scale level drawdown by evaporation. One of the competing scenarios proposed for the termination of this environmental crisis 5.3 million years ago consists of a megaflooding event refilling the Mediterranean Sea through the Strait of Gibraltar: the Zanclean flood. The main evidence supporting this hypothesis is a nearly 390 km long and several hundred meters deep erosion channel extending from the Gulf of Cádiz (Atlantic Ocean) to the Algerian Basin (Western Mediterranean), implying the excavation of ca. 1000 km3 of Miocene sediment and bedrock. Based on the understanding obtained from Pleistocene onshore megaflooding events and using ad-hoc hydrodynamic modeling, here we explore two predictions of the Zanclean outburst flood hypothesis: 1) The formation of similar erosion features at sills communicating sub-basins within the Mediterranean Sea, specifically at the Sicily Sill; and 2) the accumulation of the eroded materials as megaflood deposits in areas of low flow energy. Recent data show a 6-km-wide amphitheater-shaped canyon preserved at the Malta Escarpment that may represent the erosional expression of the Zanclean flood after filling the western Mediterranean and spilling into the Eastern Basin. Next to that canyon, a ~1600 km3 accumulation of chaotic, seismically transparent sediment has been found in the Ionian Sea, compatible in age and facies with megaflood deposits. Another candidate megaflood deposit has been identified in the Alborán Sea in the form of elongated sedimentary bodies that parallel the flooding channel and are seismically characterized by chaotic and discontinuous stratified reflections, that we interpret as equivalent to gravel and boulder megabars described in terrestrial megaflood settings. Numerical model predictions show that sand deposits found at the Miocene/Pliocene (M/P) boundary in ODP sites 974 and 975 (South Balearic and Tyrrhenian seas) are consistent with suspension transport from the Strait of Gibraltar during a flooding event at a peak water discharge of ~108 m3 s−1.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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