Turbidity Currents Flashcards
1
Q
Turbidities
A
The deposits that turbidity currents form.
2
Q
Deep-Sea Canyons
A
- No more than river channels that are exposed when sea level is low and drowned when sea level is high.
3
Q
Describe some attributes of the Bengal Fan
A
- The largest fan system due to the Himalayas
4
Q
Draw and describe a subaqueous levee formation
A
Dominated by turbidity currents
- Starts with a flat surface (flat plain) and then a turbidity current comes through.
- This becomes unstable due to loose mud piling on top of more loose mud.
- Eventually, it will collapse.
- because it is on a steep slope and because of earthquakes (in the case of the collision coasts) & monsoons.
5
Q
The Morphology of Turbidity Currents - draw a diagram and explain sediment deposits at each stage.
A
- Head: Erodes the sediment and sends into suspension (largest sediment types) (sole marks)
- Neck: Large sediments will be deposited out
- Body: Sands get deposited
- Tail: Fine grain sediments get deposited (silt/clay)
6
Q
What determines the velocity of the Turbidity Current?
A
- Density
- The slope
Experiences high velocity at the base and backwards movement at the top.
7
Q
Draw and describe the Bouma Sequence
A
When drawing the graph: the bar that is the longest is the coarser sediment and the bar that is the shortest is the finer sediments. Upward sequence.
- A= Head
- B= Neck – deposited in the neck region (coarse material)
- C= Body – does not rain down flat – it plumes causing it to form at an angle (cross-bedding). Think about ripples migrating.
- D= Tail – no more turbulence and rain downs so it lays flat
- E= in between turbidity currents. Calcareous Ooze potential.
8
Q
What are factors that affect the completeness of the Bouma Sequence?
A
- Where the turbidite is found and the size is based on the velocity of the turbidity current.
- Distance from the source (sediment loss is less the closer you are to the source)
- Time between events – The firs thing a turbidity current does when it comes through is that it erodes the top of the last one. If you have turbidity currents right after each other, never have a chance to create a D or E unit. Tells it was a busy time.
- Volume & types of sediment composing the turbidity current
- Position with fan (channel, levee, fan)