Zuffa, G. G. et al. (2000): Turbidite megabeds in an oceanic rift valley recording jokulhlaups of late Pleistocene glacial lakes of the Western United States

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 169
DSDP 5
DSDP 5 35
ODP 169 1037
ODP 169 1038
Identifier:
2000-045702
georefid

Creator:
Zuffa, G. G.
Universita di Bologna, Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Bologna, Italy
author

Normark, W. R.
U. S. Geological Survey, United States
author

Serra, F.
University of Southern Mississippi, United States
author

Brunner, C. A.
author

Identification:
Turbidite megabeds in an oceanic rift valley recording jokulhlaups of late Pleistocene glacial lakes of the Western United States
2000
Journal of Geology
University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL, United States
108
3
253-274
Escanaba Trough is the southernmost segment of the Gorda Ridge and is filled by sandy turbidites locally exceeding 500 m in thickness. New results from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Sites 1037 and 1038 that include accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) (super 14) C dates and revised petrographic evaluation of the sediment provenance, combined with high-resolution seismic-reflection profiles, provide a lithostratigraphic framework for the turbidite deposits. Three fining-upward units of sandy turbidites from the upper 365 m at ODP Site 1037 can be correlated with sediment recovered at ODP Site 1038 and Deep Sea Drilling Program (DSDP) Site 35. Six AMS (super 14) C ages in the upper 317 m of the sequence at Site 1037 indicate that average deposition rates exceeded 10 m/k.yr. between 32 and 11 ka, with nearly instantaneous deposition of one approximately 60-m interval of sand. Petrography of the sand beds is consistent with a Columbia River source for the entire sedimentary sequence in Escanaba Trough. High-resolution acoustic stratigraphy shows that the turbidites in the upper 60 m at Site 1037 provide a characteristic sequence of key reflectors that occurs across the floor of the entire Escanaba Trough. Recent mapping of turbidite systems in the northeast Pacific Ocean suggests that the turbidity currents reached the Escanaba Trough along an 1100-km-long pathway from the Columbia River to the west flank of the Gorda Ridge. The age of the upper fining-upward unit of sandy turbidites appears to correspond to the latest Wisconsinan outburst of glacial Lake Missoula. Many of the outbursts, or jokulhlaups, from the glacial lakes probably continued flowing as hyperpycnally generated turbidity currents on entering the sea at the mouth of the Columbia River.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:41.1000
West:-127.3000East: -127.3000
South:40.3000

Quaternary geology; absolute age; acoustical methods; C-14; carbon; Cenozoic; clastic sediments; Columbia River; correlation; dates; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP Site 35; East Pacific; Escanaba Trough; Foraminifera; geophysical methods; geophysical profiles; geophysical surveys; glacial features; glacial lakes; Gorda Rise; heavy minerals; high-resolution methods; Invertebrata; isotopes; jokulhlaups; Lake Missoula; lakes; Leg 169; Leg 5; lithostratigraphy; magnetic susceptibility; marine sediments; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1037; ODP Site 1038; Pacific Ocean; paleomagnetism; physical properties; Pleistocene; Protista; provenance; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes; reflection methods; rift zones; sand; sediment transport; sedimentation; sedimentation rates; sediments; seismic methods; seismic profiles; seismic stratigraphy; surveys; turbidite; United States; upper Pleistocene; upper Wisconsinan; volcaniclastics; Western U.S.; Wisconsinan;

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