In:
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, American Geophysical Union (AGU), Vol. 104, No. B11 ( 1999-11-10), p. 25331-25348
Abstract:
A large area of debris avalanche deposits has been discovered on the western submarine flanks of the island of La Palma. Multibeam bathymetry and its derivative backscatter data, Towed Ocean Bottom Instrument (TOBI) sidescan sonar images, and 3.5 kHz and airgun seismic reflection data have been used to identify at least two, and possibly as many as four, major landslide events. The youngest of the events, the Cumbre Nueva Debris Avalanche, extends onshore into the valleys bounded by the Caldera de Taburiente and Cumbre Nueva Ridge, which mark the degraded collapse scars. Radiometric dating of the volcanic flows in the headwall indicate an age of between 536 and 125 ka for this landslide. The debris avalanche covers an area of 780 km 2 , has a maximum thickness of 500 m, and has an estimated volume of 95 km 3 . Older deposits, collectively referred to as the Playa de la Veta Debris Avalanche Complex, are probably, as the name indicates, an amalgamation of at least two or three events rather than the result of a single catastrophic failure. The Playa de la Veta Debris Avalanche Complex is associated onshore with an unconformity dated as late Matuyama (1 Ma to 800 ka). It covers an area of 1200 km 2 , has a maximum thickness of 1300 m, and may represent a total volume of up to 650 km 3 . The greater thicknesses and limited areas occupied by debris avalanches on the western flank of La Palma, compared to other landslides in the Canary Archipelago, suggest that the La Palma landslide masses have relatively low mobility. The different debris avalanche lobes formed by each landslide event are separated by channels 2–2.5 km wide. The clear relationship between channel position and the boundaries of each debris avalanche lobe indicates that debris avalanches control later channel formation and pathways. The relief of the submarine flanks of the La Palma volcanoes, in the areas of island slope unaffected by landslides, is mainly the result of constructional volcanic processes. However, the older submarine slopes, such as in the northern Taburiente volcano, may also have been modified by smaller‐scale submarine mass wasting and sediment flows.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
0148-0227
DOI:
10.1029/1999JB900243
Language:
English
Publisher:
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Publication Date:
1999
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