Abstract

Both submarine landslides and submarine canyons can transfer large amounts of terrigenous quantities from the continental shelf to the deep sea. In some cases, they can have a close relationship to their spatial distribution, formation and evolution. Submarine landslides on the shelf–slope can provide early depressions for submarine canyons, representing the early stage of submarine canyons. The continuous downcutting process during the evolution of submarine canyons can steepen the gradient of the canyon sidewalls, which can lead to the occurrence of submarine landslides. However, the role of submarine canyons in the initiation of slope failure has been overlooked. In this study, high-resolution multibeam bathymetry data, submarine image data and 2-D seismic data were used to investigate two adjacent submarine landslides developed on the northern slope of the Xisha Trough and the spatiotemporal relationship of these landslides to the Central Canyon. We identified a steep downslope between the submarine landslides and the Central Canyon. The Central Canyon formation age was much earlier than those of the submarine landslides. The Central Canyon is filled with modern submarine landslide deposits. The characteristics of the multiple failure scarps indicate retrogressive failure of the submarine landslides. We suggest that the submarine landslides developed on the northern slope of the Xisha Trough Basin have finally been captured by the Central Canyon. We determined that the emptying of sediments at the end of the northern slope of the Xisha Trough Basin caused by the development of the Central Canyon caused the end of the northern slope of the Xisha Trough Basin to lose support, which may have affected the slope stability and could have even played a role in the initiation of submarine landslides. Consequently, the slope area along the Central Canyon may be susceptible to slope instability and slope failure processes.

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