Abstract

Escanaba Trough, the median valley of Gorda Ridge, is partly filled with terrigenous sediment which was eroded mostly from rocks in the Klamath and Columbia River drainage basins and transported across the sea floor to the trough by turbidity currents. Basal or lower cores contain sand derived from the south-central metamorphic belt of the Klamath Mountains, whereas the upper cores have sand derived from the Columbia River drainage basin. Columbia River sediment reached Escanaba Trough either after a barrier at Blanco Valley had been destroyed by tectonic movement or after a gradient, sufficient to maintain turbidity current momentum, had developed between the Astoria Fan apex and the trough. Sediment in Escanaba Trough is young and most probably was deposited when sea level was lower than at present, perhaps during the Wisconsin Glacial Age.

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