ABSTRACT The deposits of flood- and earthquake-derived subaqueous sediment gravity flows represent a significant fraction of lacustrine and deep-sea sedimentary successions, thus providing a valuable record of such natural disasters. The magnitude of these events and the thickness of the associated deposits are considered to follow a lognormal or power-law frequency distribution, whilst that of time intervals between subsequent events appear to be best approximated by a Poisson model, indicative of a random, time-independent phenomenon. However, the debate on whether the sedimentary record of these natural disasters is governed by randomness alone or whether there is some underlying stratigraphic ordering is still unsettled and requires detailed time-series analysis. This study consists of a time-series analysis of mudstone- and sandstone-dominated turbidite successions offshore a fan-delta system in the Neogene Aoshima Formation that belongs to the sedimentary fill of the forearc basin of southwest Japan. The formation consists of a monotonous alternation of very fine- to medium-grained sandstones capped by hemipelagic mudstones and, more rarely, by turbidite mudstones. The results show that the autocorrelation function of the time series suggests quasi-periodic variability in the upper sandstone-dominated part, whereas the lower mudstone-dominated part shows a white-noise-like pattern. Rescaled range analysis shows that the number of events per unit time in the lower part is characterized by a random time series, such as Brownian noise with a Hurst exponent of 0.5. In contrast, the thickness of event beds of the lower part and the thickness and the number of events of the upper part are persistent time series with a Hurst exponent > 0.5. These results suggest that the number of turbidite depositional events in the mudstone-dominated part indicates random timing, whereas its thickness time series and the sandstone-dominant part are not governed by simple stochastic processes but are affected by sea-level changes, sediment transport dynamics, and other factors such as, for example, seafloor topography.