Abstract

Submarine landslides on open continental slopes can be prodigious in scale. They are an important process for global sediment fluxes, and can generate very damaging tsunamis. Submarine landslides are far harder to monitor directly than terrestrial landslides, and much greater uncertainty surrounds their preconditioning factors and triggers. Submarine slope failure often occurs on remarkably low (< 2°) gradients that are almost always stable on land, indicating that particularly high excess pore pressures must be involved. Earthquakes trigger some large submarine landslides, but not all major earthquakes cause widespread slope failure. The headwalls of many large submarine landslides appear to be located in water depths that are too deep for triggering by gas hydrate dissociation. The available evidence indicates that landslide occurrence is either weakly (or not) linked to changes in sea level or atmospheric methane abundance, or the available dates for open continental slope landslides are too imprecise to tell. Similarly, available evidence does not strongly support a view that landslides play an important role in methane emissions that cause climatic change. However, the largest and best-dated open continental slope landslide (the Storegga Slide) coincides with a major cooling event 8,200 years ago. This association suggests that caution may be needed when stating that there is no link between large open slope landslides and climate change.

Highlights

  • Submarine landslides on open continental slopes can be exceptionally large, with volumes that far exceed those of any terrestrial landslide (Table 1)

  • It has been proposed that landslide frequency may increase as a result of warming climates and rising sea levels via processes including the melting of gas hydrate (Kennett et al, 2003; Maslin et al, 2004), an ice-like substance containing methane hosted in marine sediment (Maslin et al, 2010), or through changes in crustal loading that may trigger earthquakes and associated landslides (Brothers et al, 2013; Smith et al, 2013)

  • CONCLUDING REMARKS Understanding huge open continental slope landslides remains a challenge for Earth science

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Summary

Large Submarine Landslides on Continental Slopes

Submarine landslides on open continental slopes can be prodigious in scale. They are an important process for global sediment fluxes, and can generate very damaging tsunamis. Earthquakes trigger some large submarine landslides, but not all major earthquakes cause widespread slope failure. The largest and best-dated open continental slope landslide (the Storegga Slide) coincides with a major cooling event 8,200 years ago. This association suggests that caution may be needed when stating that there is no link between large open slope landslides and climate change

INTRODUCTION
Sediment mobilized on land during a single major earthquake
Vertical E ective
Balearic Abyssal
Locations in b to e
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