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Dunlap, Dallas B. et al. (2010): Seismic geomorphology of offshore Morocco's east margin, Safi Haute Mer area
Leg/Site/Hole:
Related Expeditions:
DSDP 41
DSDP 50
DSDP 41 370
DSDP 50 415
DSDP 50 416
Identifier:
ID:
2010-050141
Type:
georefid
ID:
10.1306/10270909055
Type:
doi
Creator:
Name:
Dunlap, Dallas B.
Affiliation:
Bureau of Economic Geology, Austin, TX, United States
Role:
author
Name:
Wood, Lesli J.
Affiliation:
EOG Resources, United States
Role:
author
Name:
Weisenberger, Chad
Affiliation:
National Office of Hydrocarbons and Mining, Morocco
Role:
author
Name:
Jabour, Haddou
Affiliation:
Role:
author
Identification:
Title:
Seismic geomorphology of offshore Morocco's east margin, Safi Haute Mer area
Year:
2010
Source:
AAPG Bulletin
Publisher:
American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Tulsa, OK, United States
Volume:
94
Issue:
5
Pages:
615-642
Abstract:
The lower continental slope of Morocco's west coast consists of Triassic-age salt manifested in the form of diapirs, tongues, sheets, canopies, and toe thrusts. Active salt diapirism and regional tectonics greatly influence the morphology of the modern sea floor, forming a severely rugose expression with ongoing minibasin development and episodic submarine failure. Detailed mapping of a 1064-km (super 2) (411-mi (super 2) ) seismic survey acquired in the Safi Haute Mer area revealed that Jurassic to Holocene salt mobilization continually affected distribution of sediment, causing a range of depositional flow styles, from slumps to sheet slides and mass-transport complexes (MTCs). Large sediment waves (20 km [12 mi] long, 1.5-km [0.9-mi] wavelength) were also documented at the end of the Aptian. An east-west-trending structural anticline downdip of the salt activated during initiation of the Atlas uplift in the latest Cretaceous to earliest Tertiary and shaped much of the lower slope into the Tertiary with a persistent canyon system and slope channels. The largest of the debris flows is a Cretaceous-age MTC, a 500-m (1640-ft)-thick flow that spans an area of up to 20,000 km (super 2) (7722 mi (super 2) ). Composing the MTC are (1) chaotic, mounded seismic facies; (2) internal syndepositional thrusts; and (3) transported megablocks (3.3 km (super 2) [1.3 mi (super 2) ]) with preserved internal stratigraphy. The MTC originated from an upslope collapse of a narrow shelf during the earliest phases of the Alpine orogeny.
Language:
English
Genre:
Serial
Rights:
URL:
Coverage:
Geographic coordinates:
North:32.0000
West:-11.3000
East: -10.4000
South:31.0000
Keywords:
Structural geology; Applied geophysics; Africa; Alpine Orogeny; anticlines; Aptian; Atlantic Ocean; Atlas Mountains; basement; Cenozoic; continental slope; Cretaceous; Deep Sea Drilling Project; diapirism; diapirs; DSDP Site 370; DSDP Site 415; DSDP Site 416; faults; folds; geometry; geophysical methods; geophysical profiles; geophysical surveys; gravity sliding; Holocene; IPOD; Jurassic; Leg 41; Leg 50; Lower Cretaceous; mass movements; Mesozoic; Morocco; neotectonics; normal faults; North Africa; North Atlantic; ocean floors; orogeny; Quaternary; Safi Haute Mer; salt tectonics; sedimentation; seismic methods; seismic profiles; slumping; structural controls; submarine canyons; surveys; tectonics; Tertiary; three-dimensional models; Triassic;
.
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