Cita, Maria Bianca; Racchetti, Sonia; Brambilla, Rafaella; Bertarini, Luigi; Colombaroli, Daniele; Morelli, Luci; Negri, Mauro; Ritter, Matthias; Rovira, Enrico; Sala, Paola; Sanvito, Simona (1998): Evoluzione dei bacini profondi del Mediterraneo documentata delle variazioni nelle velocita di sedimentazione nel Plio-Pleistocene Mediterranean deep basins evolution documented by changes in sedimentation rates recorded in the Plio-Pleistocene. Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, Rome, Italy, Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. Rendiconti Lincei. Scienze Fisiche e Naturali, 9 (9(2)), 83-100, georefid:2000-004660

Abstract:
Mediterranean deep basins evolution documented by changes in sedimentation rates recorded in the Plio-Pleistocene. The data base for this study is represented by 46 DSDP-ODP drill sites that penetrated the sediments of the various Mediterranean basins for several hundred meters. Sedimentation rates were calculated for three discrete, well defined stratigraphic intervals extending from 5.33 Ma to time zero. A great dispersal of values, ranging from less than 5 up to 30 cm/1000 y is recorded in the Pleistocene, with maxima measured in the Nile cone, as a result of a high sediment supply from the longest river in the world, and in the Marsili basin, the deepest and youngest subbasin of the rapidly subsiding Tyrrhenian back-arc basin. In the late Pliocene the values recorded on structural highs are approximately half of those from basinal settings, whereas drillsites on basin margin often display depositional gaps. Starved basin conditions characterize the early Pliocene from 5.33 to 3.9 Ma, where sedimentation rates are consistently low, both on highs and on lows. We interpret this as a response to the rapid sea-level rise following the Messinian "salinity crisis" (Pliocene transgression). During the substantial draw-down when the water level in the playa lakes was two to three kilometers lower than world-wide sea-level, the major tributaries of the Mediterranean overincised their riverbed, and sedimentary aprons were formed in the deep basins. No sediment supply was available soon after the rapid sea-level rise, and approximately one million years elapsed before a new equilibrium was re-estabilished.
Coverage:
West: -5.3000 East: 42.0000 North: 46.4000 South: 30.1000
West: NaN East: NaN North: NaN South: NaN
Data access:
Provider: SEDIS Publication Catalogue
Data set link: http://sedis.iodp.org/pub-catalogue/index.php?id=2000-004660 (c.f. for more detailed metadata)
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