Sommerfield, Christopher K.; Lee, Homa J. (2004): Across-shelf sediment transport since the last glacial maximum, Southern California margin. Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States, Geology (Boulder), 32 (4), 345-348, georefid:2004-060787

Abstract:
Correlation of continental shelf-slope stratigraphy in Santa Monica Bay (southern California) with Ocean Drilling Program records for nearby slope-basin sites has illuminated the timing and scale of terrigenous sediment dispersal on margin since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Marine flooding surfaces preserved in a transgressive sequence on the Santa Monica Shelf provide a key link between base-level elevation and sediment transport across shelf. Sediment-accumulation rates at slope-basin sites were maximal ca. 15-10 ka, well after the LGM, decreased during the 12-9 ka transition from fluvial-estuarine to fully marine conditions on the shelf, and decelerated throughout the Holocene to 30%-75% of their values at the LGM. The deceleration is interpreted to manifest a landward shift in the margin depocenter with the onset of transgressive sedimentation beginning when sea level surmounted the shelf edge ca. 13 ka, as predicted by sequence-stratigraphic models. However, the records make clear that factors other than base level modulated slope-basin accumulation rates during the deglaciation.
Coverage:
West: -121.0625 East: -118.2000 North: 34.3205 South: 33.4255
Relations:
Expedition: 146
Site: 146-893
Expedition: 167
Site: 167-1015
Site: 167-1017
Data access:
Provider: SEDIS Publication Catalogue
Data set link: http://sedis.iodp.org/pub-catalogue/index.php?id=10.1130/G20182.2 (c.f. for more detailed metadata)
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