Abstract

Depositional and erosional bedforms can be used to reconstruct sedimentary processes and aid palaeoenvironmental interpretations. Using exhumed deep-marine strata in the Eocene Aínsa Basin, Spain, we document a 3-dimensional package of dunes, a rarely identified bedform in deep-marine environments. Our analysis shows that the dunes have curvilinear crests in planform, with smaller superimposed oblique dunes and ripples across the stoss sides. Beds containing these dunes have two main internal divisions: a lower inversely-graded (fine-to-coarse sandstone) and predominantly structureless division, and an upper coarse-grained sandstone division with well-developed cross-stratification, which is scoured and mantled with mudclasts and coarse-grains on the stoss-side. The rugose remnant relief of the bedforms controls the location of subsequent bedforms. Following recently reported direct measurements of natural turbidity currents, we interpret the basal division as recording deposition from the dense basal head of a high-velocity turbidity current, followed by the development of dunes beneath the more sustained but relatively high-velocity and unsteady flow body that reworked the initial sandy deposit into downstream migrating dunes and scours. These dune-forming beds have been identified in different deep-water environments in the Aínsa Basin stratigraphy, including channel overbank and channel mouth settings and scour-fills. These locations suggest that the dunes were intimately tied to high-velocity flows that bypassed through channel axes before expanded and depositing in less confined channel overbank or channel mouth settings. Preservation of these dunes in the Aínsa Basin was likely enhanced by tectonically-forced lateral migration of channels, which prevented cannibalisation of bypass-zones, in combination with high aggradation rates due to confinement, or periodic supply of flows from a particularly clay-poor source area. Where identified these dune-like bedforms are considered diagnostic of substantial sediment bypass downslope to deep-water basins.

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