Lopez, Caroll et al. (2010): Frontal ridge slope failure at the northern Cascadia margin; margin-normal fault and gas hydrate control

Leg/Site/Hole:
IODP 311
IODP 311 U1326
Identifier:
2010-100886
georefid

10.1130/G31136.1
doi

Creator:
Lopez, Caroll
University of Victoria, School of Earth and Ocean Sciences, Victoria, BC, Canada
author

Spence, George
University of Washington, United States
author

Hyndman, Roy
author

Kelley, Deborah
author

Identification:
Frontal ridge slope failure at the northern Cascadia margin; margin-normal fault and gas hydrate control
2010
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
38
11
967-970
On the northern Cascadia accretionary margin off Vancouver Island, Canada, there are numerous sedimentary slide features near the base of the slope, and significant amounts of gas hydrate found beneath the ridge suggest a possible connection. A 2-km-wide collapse structure with a 300-m-high headwall has been studied by multibeam bathymetry and a single-channel seismic reflection grid. Migrated seismic reflection lines on the frontal ridge image multiple 15-75-m-high seafloor scarps perpendicular to the margin that are the seafloor expressions of normal faults that cut deeply into the sediment section. Two of the largest faults are aligned with the sidewalls of the slide, indicating that the lateral extent of the collapse is fault controlled. The presence of marine gas hydrate beneath the ridge is based on a widespread hydrate bottom-simulating reflector (BSR), high velocities determined by ocean bottom seismograph data, and sediment core samples and downhole logs collected by the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program at Site U1326. The depth of the BSR at 255 (+ or -15) m coincides closely with the estimated depth of the glide plane beneath the slide. This suggests that the base of the slope failure is related to the contrast between strong hydrate-cemented sediments above the BSR and underlying weak sediments containing free gas. Strong earthquake shaking on this convergent margin likely provides the trigger for the slide.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:48.3800
West:-127.0300East: -127.0300
South:48.3800

Oceanography; Applied geophysics; accretionary wedges; acoustical methods; bathymetry; bottom-simulating reflectors; British Columbia; Canada; Cascadia subduction zone; collapse structures; continental margin; continental slope; cores; East Pacific; Expedition 311; failures; fault scarps; faults; gas hydrates; geophysical methods; geophysical surveys; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; IODP Site U1326; marine sediments; mass movements; multibeam methods; normal faults; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; ocean bottom seismographs; Pacific Ocean; plate convergence; reflection methods; sediments; seismic methods; seismicity; seismographs; slumping; surveys; Vancouver Island; Western Canada;

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