Abstract

Submarine lobes form at the distal end of sediment gravity flow systems and are globally important sinks for sediment, anthropogenic pollutants and organic carbon, as well as forming hydrocarbon and CO2 reservoirs. Deep-marine, near bed or bottom currents can modify gravity flow pathways and sediment distribution by directly interacting with the flow or by modifying seafloor morphology. Deciphering the nature of gravity- and bottom currents interaction, particularly in ancient systems, remains a challenge due to the lack of integrated datasets and the necessary oceanographic framework. Here we analyse high-resolution 3D seismic reflection and core data from the Upper Cretaceous interval offshore Tanzania to reveal the interaction of turbidite lobes with fine-grained sediment waves and contourite drift deposits. Contourite drift morphology governs the large-scale confinement style and shape of lobes that range from frontally confined and crescent shaped, to laterally confined and elongated, to semi-confined lobes. Core data reveals massive to cross-laminated high density turbidites in the lobe axis position that show no direct interaction between gravity flows and contour currents. Lobe off-axis and fringe deposits consist of parallel- and ripple-laminated, low density turbidites, which are inter-bedded with bioturbated, muddy siltstones that represent the toes of contourite drifts. Starved ripples, and streaks of up to fine-grained sandstone above individual turbidite beds indicate reworking by bottom currents. This facies distribution reflects the temporal interaction of quasi-steady bottom currents and turbidity currents that interact with the topography and build lobes over short periods of time. Frontally confined turbidity currents form lobes in a fill-and-spill fashion, in which the confinement of turbidity currents causes rapid deposition and obscures any bottom current signal. Lateral confinement causes increased turbidity current runout length, and promotes the development of lobe fringes with a high proportion of bottom current reworked sands. During times when sediment gravity flows are subordinate, contourites accumulate on top of the lobe, confining the next flow and thus modifying the overall stacking pattern of the lobe complex. Although sediment volumes of these bottom current modified lobe complexes are comparable to other deep-marine systems, bottom currents considerably influence facies distribution and deposit architecture.

Highlights

  • Submarine lobes form at the distal end of deep-marine sedimentary systems where they act as ultimate sink for vast amounts of sediment, organic matter and anthropogenic pollutants (Clift et al, 2001; Gwiazda et al, 2015; Kane and Clare, 2019)

  • This study shows how the temporal interaction of turbidity- and contour currents influenced the deposition, facies and stacking patterns of submarine lobe complexes offshore Tanzania

  • It is shown that these systems are controlled by the different flow characteristics of turbidity currents and margin parallel bottom currents and the time during which both mechanisms are active

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Summary

Introduction

Submarine lobes form at the distal end of deep-marine sedimentary systems where they act as ultimate sink for vast amounts of sediment, organic matter and anthropogenic pollutants (Clift et al, 2001; Gwiazda et al, 2015; Kane and Clare, 2019). This makes them important archives for the reconstruction of past sediment budgets, climate and anthropogenic pollution, as well as reservoirs for hydrocarbons and carbon sequestration (Galy et al, 2007; Sømme et al, 2011; Bell et al, 2018a; Jobe et al, 2018; Rabouille et al, 2019; Pohl et al, 2020). The processes that control turbidite-contourite interaction in distal, net-depositional systems likely differ from their proximal counterparts as they are subject to a lower frequency of high-concentration sediment-laden turbidity currents

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