Babonneau, Nathalie; Savoye, Bruno; Droz, Laurence; Morash, Alain; Bez, Martine (2005): Large modern deep-sea fans; the Amazon Channel versus the Zaire Channel. American Association of Petroleum Geologists and Society for Sedimentary Geology, Tulsa, OK, United States, In: Anonymous, AAPG 2005 annual convention; abstracts volume, 14, A9, georefid:2009-047829

Abstract:
Since the 80's, the Amazon deep-sea fan remains the reference of modern reservoir analog of turbidite environments. Studies, based on seismic surveys, GLORIA and seabeam data and ODP well cores (Leg 155), initiated the main concepts and models about large deep-sea fans and meandering turbidite channels (Damuth et al., 1988; Manley and Flood, 1988; Pirmez and Flood, 1995; Flood et al., 1997). Discoveries of deep-water reservoir in the Gulf of Guinea in the 90's led TOTAL and IFREMER to elaborate the ZaiAngo research project, in order to study the Zaire/Congo deep-sea fan at the regional scale and to understand sedimentary architectures at the reservoir scale with very high-resolution tools. ZaiAngo data, acquired over the Zaire fan, induced new insights of the understanding of large turbidite channels, for example concerning channel incision, levee development, meander migration, avulsion processes, and distal lobe architecture (Savoye et al., 2000; Babonneau et al., 2002; Droz et al., 2003). In spite of similar fan size, the Zaire channel and the Amazon channel are relatively different in terms of sedimentary architecture and channel behaviour (incision versus aggradation). The insights and the news questions revealed by ZaiAngo studies led IFREMER to re-explore the Amazon Channel, with high-resolution bathymetric and seismic tools. Combined with ODP data and ZaiAngo results, the study of Lobestory data offers new elements to elaborate a detailed model of the sedimentary architecture of large meandering channel, to understand flow process responsible of channel development and to identify the main controls on channel development and evolution.
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Expedition: 155
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Provider: SEDIS Publication Catalogue
Data set link: http://sedis.iodp.org/pub-catalogue/index.php?id=2009-047829 (c.f. for more detailed metadata)
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