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Post-Eocene seismic stratigraphy of the deep ocean basin adjacent to the southeast African continental margin: a record of geostrophic bottom current systems
Niemi, T.M.; Ben-Avraham, Z.; Hartnady, C.J.H.; Reznikov, M. (2000). Post-Eocene seismic stratigraphy of the deep ocean basin adjacent to the southeast African continental margin: a record of geostrophic bottom current systems. Mar. Geol. 162(2-4): 237-258. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0025-3227(99)00062-6
In: Marine Geology. Elsevier: Amsterdam. ISSN 0025-3227; e-ISSN 1872-6151, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Drift
    Palaeo studies > Oceanography > Palaeoceanography
    Sediments > Clastics > Contourites
Author keywords
    AABW; southeast Africa continental margin

Authors  Top | Datasets 
  • Niemi, T.M.
  • Ben-Avraham, Z.
  • Hartnady, C.J.H.
  • Reznikov, M.

Abstract
    A high-resolution seismic-reflection survey of the Transkei Basin and Natal Valley permits the first recognition of three major reflectors that mark basin-wide unconformities across the continental rise and deep abyssal plain off the southeast African continental margin. Reflector O marks a change in acoustic reflectivity, coincident with a change in sedimentary bedforms from generally parallel bedding below to large-scale lenticular and clinoform shapes above. Reflector O probably marks the onset of cold, abyssal current circulation around the Eocene–Oligocene boundary. The overlying O sequence records deposition of a contourite drift (Oribi Drift) by northeast flowing abyssal currents at ∼4000 m water depths along the continental rise of the northeastern Agulhas Fracture Zone. This water depth is shallower than present-day Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW). The M reflector unconformity (possibly lower Middle Miocene) marks seafloor erosion in 4500 m water depth in the Transkei Basin and the cessation of drift construction along the continental rise. Above reflector M in the abyssal plain, a contourite drift (M-Drift) records deposition from an east-flowing bottom current in a location similar to, but slightly shallower than present-day AABW. The stagnation of bottom current activity in the northern Natal Valley and/or a rapid influx of sediment accumulation is marked by M sequence turbidite sediments (the Mzimkulu apron) deposited against and burying the Oribi Drift on the continental rise. Reworking of M sequence sediment along the continental rise to form low mounds (M4) and sediment waves in the northern Natal Valley indicate that a shallow, bottom current flowed at depths of 3800 to 3600 m. The coeval current-molding of the slope and abyssal plain indicates a two-layered structure of the bottom water may have commenced in the Miocene. Reflector P is the most pronounced unconformity in the deep abyssal plain, where it truncates M Sequence reflectors, and marks the base the Agulhas Drift which stands approximately 200 m above the surrounding seafloor. The P Sequence sedimentation is estimated to have begun in the Pliocene prior to or concurrent with an expansion of Southern and Northern polar ice-caps. Major slumping of the continental slope in the Natal Valley also began at this time, probably triggered by a combination of onland neotectonic activity and erosion of the base of the slope by vigorous bottom currents (possibly North Atlantic Deep Water, NADW).

Datasets (2)
  • Flanders Marine Institute; Renard Centre of Marine Geology - Ugent (2018). Global contourite distribution database, version 2. Available online at https://www.marineregions.org, more
  • Flanders Marine Institute; Renard Centre of Marine Geology - Ugent (2019). Global contourite distribution database, version 3. Available online at https://www.marineregions.org, more

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