Abstract

The inner continental shelf off the northern Outer Banks of North Carolina was mapped using sidescan sonar, interferometric swath bathymetry, and high-resolution chirp and boomer subbottom profiling systems. We use this information to describe the shallow stratigraphy, reinterpret formation mechanisms of some shoal features, evaluate local relative sea-levels during the Late Pleistocene, and provide new constraints, via recent bedform evolution, on regional sediment transport patterns. The study area is approximately 290 km long by 11 km wide, extending from False Cape, Virginia to Cape Lookout, North Carolina, in water depths ranging from 6 to 34 m. Late Pleistocene sedimentary units comprise the shallow geologic framework of this region and determine both the morphology of the inner shelf and the distribution of sediment sources and sinks. We identify Pleistocene sedimentary units beneath Diamond Shoals that may have provided a geologic template for the location of modern Cape Hatteras and earlier paleo-capes during the Late Pleistocene. These units indicate shallow marine deposition 15–25 m below present sea-level. The uppermost Pleistocene unit may have been deposited as recently as Marine Isotope Stage 3, although some apparent ages for this timing may be suspect. Paleofluvial valleys incised during the Last Glacial Maximum traverse the inner shelf throughout the study area and dissect the Late Pleistocene units. Sediments deposited in the valleys record the Holocene transgression and provide insight into the evolutionary history of the barrier-estuary system in this region. The relationship between these valleys and adjacent shoal complexes suggests that the paleo-Roanoke River did not form the Albemarle Shelf Valley complex as previously proposed; a major fluvial system is absent and thus makes the formation of this feature enigmatic. Major shoal features in the study area show mobility at decadal to centennial timescales, including nearly a kilometer of shoal migration over the past 134 yr. Sorted bedforms occupy ~ 1000 km 2 of seafloor in Raleigh Bay, and indicate regional sediment transport patterns between Capes Hatteras and Lookout that help explain long-term sediment accumulation and morphologic development. Portions of the inner continental shelf with relatively high sediment abundance are characterized by shoals and shoreface-attached ridges, and where sediment is less abundant, the seafloor is dominated by sorted bedforms. These relationships are also observed in other passive margin settings, suggesting a continuum of shelf morphology that may have broad application for interpreting inner shelf sedimentation patterns. • We mapped ~ 3200 km 3 of the North Carolina inner continental shelf. • Modern Cape Hatteras may have been the location of several ancient paleo-capes. • Major shoal complexes are shown to migrate ~ 1 km per century. • Sediment availability determines the morphology of the inner continental shelf. • Seafloor bedforms reflect sediment availability and transport directions.

Highlights

  • The inner continental shelf links the subaqueous portion of the continental margin and the subaerial coast

  • The regional geologic framework of the northeastern North Carolina inner continental shelf substantially influences the evolution of coastal environments in the study area; the morphology of the shelf; the sources, composition, transport, and sinks of sediment; and the morphology of the adjacent barrier islands and cuspate forelands

  • In an early study of the seismic stratigraphy of this area, Shideler et al (1972) mapped a regionally-extensive reflection surface and proposed, in the absence of direct age control, that it represented the Miocene and post-Miocene boundary. We interpret their R1 as being the same reflection that we and M2010 mapped as Q0, and determined through correlation with regional core data to correspond to the Pliocene–Pleistocene boundary (M2010; Culver et al, 2008; 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

The inner continental shelf links the subaqueous portion of the continental margin and the subaerial coast. Geophysical surveys of the inner continental shelf provide a basis for understanding the geologic history of the coastal system (Anderson et al, 2004), furnish insight into coastal sediment flux (Schwab et al, 2000; Denny et al, 2013), and can be used to identify sand resources and potential implications for mitigating erosion hazards through beach nourishment (Lazarus et al, 2011). Coastal areas with limited sediment supplies, such as North Carolina, are significantly influenced by the geologic framework of older stratigraphic units that occur beneath and seaward of the shoreline (Riggs et al, 1995). In this area, as with much of the eastern United States, rivers no longer introduce significant quantities of new sand to the coastal system. The sediment available to maintain modern beaches is derived from erosion and

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