Relation of sortable silt grain-size to deep-sea current speeds: Calibration of the ‘Mud Current Meter’

Fine grain-size parameters have been used for inference of palaeoflow speeds of near-bottom currents in the deep-sea. The basic idea stems from observations of varying sediment size parameters on a continental margin with a gradient from slower flow speeds at shallower depths to faster at deeper. In...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: McCave, IN, Thornalley, DJR, Hall, IR
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1565284/1/McCave%20et%20al.,%20Accepted%20MS%20DSR%20I.pdf
https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1565284/6/Appendix%201.%20Supplementary%20Material.pdf
https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1565284/14/Appendix%202.%20Calculated%20SS%20means%20for%20given%20inputs%20and%20flow%20speeds.xlsx
https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1565284/
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Summary:Fine grain-size parameters have been used for inference of palaeoflow speeds of near-bottom currents in the deep-sea. The basic idea stems from observations of varying sediment size parameters on a continental margin with a gradient from slower flow speeds at shallower depths to faster at deeper. In the deep-sea, size-sorting occurs during deposition after benthic storm resuspension events. At flow speeds below 10-15 cm s-1 mean grain-size in the terrigenous non-cohesive ‘sortable silt’ range (denoted by SS, mean of 10-63 μm) is controlled by selective deposition, whereas above that range removal of finer material by winnowing is also argued to play a role. A calibration of the SS grain-size flow speed proxy based on sediment samples taken adjacent to sites of long-term current meters set within ~100 m of the sea bed for more than a year is presented here. Grain-size has been measured by either Sedigraph or Coulter Counter, in some cases both, between which there is an excellent correlation for SS (r = 0.96). Size-speed data indicate calibration relationships with an overall sensitivity of 1.36 ± 0.19 cm s-1 /μm. A calibration line comprising 12 points including 9 from the Iceland overflow region is well defined, but at least two other smaller groups (Weddell/Scotia Sea and NW Atlantic continental rise/Rockall Trough) are fitted by subparallel lines with a smaller constant. This suggests a possible influence of the calibre of material supplied to the site of deposition (not the initial source supply) which, if depleted in very coarse silt (31-63 μm), would limit SS to smaller values for a given speed than with a broader size-spectrum 2 supply. Local calibrations, or a core-top grain-size and local flow speed, are thus necessary to infer absolute speeds from grain-size. The trend of the calibrations diverges markedly from the slope of experimental critical erosion and deposition flow speeds versus grain-size, making it unlikely that the SS (or any deposit size for that matter) is simply predicted by the ...