Late Quaternary sedimentation in the Northern Western Basin, Ross Sea, Antarctica: seismostratigraphic features and sedimentary properties of calibrated cores

The northern Western Basin is a sector of the continental shelf of the Western Ross Sea (Fig. 1) that is considered to be the natural northward extension of the Drygalski Basin by many authors. The literature provides a general model of the evolution of the basin and the recent papers of Anderson (1...

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Main Authors: CORRADI, NICOLA, FIERRO, GIULIANO, IVALDI, ROBERTA, PITTA', ANTONELLA, Finocchiaro, F.
Other Authors: Futterer D. K., Corradi, Nicola, Fierro, Giuliano, Ivaldi, Roberta, Pitta', Antonella
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Alfred-Wegener-Stiftung 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11567/846257
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spelling ftunivgenova:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/846257 2024-01-28T09:59:02+01:00 Late Quaternary sedimentation in the Northern Western Basin, Ross Sea, Antarctica: seismostratigraphic features and sedimentary properties of calibrated cores CORRADI, NICOLA FIERRO, GIULIANO IVALDI, ROBERTA PITTA', ANTONELLA Finocchiaro, F. Futterer D. K. Corradi, Nicola Fierro, Giuliano Finocchiaro, F. Ivaldi, Roberta Pitta', Antonella 2003 STAMPA http://hdl.handle.net/11567/846257 eng eng Alfred-Wegener-Stiftung country:DEU place:Berlin ispartofbook:Antarctic Contributions to Global Earth Science ISAES-IX - 9th International Symposium on Antarctic Earth Sciences journal:TERRA NOSTRA http://hdl.handle.net/11567/846257 Late Quaternary sediments seismostratigraphy Western Basin Ross Sea Antarctica info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2003 ftunivgenova 2024-01-03T17:55:04Z The northern Western Basin is a sector of the continental shelf of the Western Ross Sea (Fig. 1) that is considered to be the natural northward extension of the Drygalski Basin by many authors. The literature provides a general model of the evolution of the basin and the recent papers of Anderson (1999) and Bart et al. (2000) propose a seismic stratigraphy for the post-Miocene sedimentation. However, the sedimentary processes during the Late Quaternary and, in particular, the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) are still little understood (Brambati et al. 2001). The preliminary results of the seismic survey (Huntec Deep Tow Boomer, Sub Bottom Profiler 3.5 kHz and 0.2-1kJ Sparker multi-array 150 dip), calibrated with the on-board data of the sediment cores (magnetic susceptibility and physical properties), permitted us to delineate the morphological and seismostratigraphic features of the first few meters of sediment and to divide the basin into four sectors. The longitudinal and cross sections of the southern sector of the basin show a morphological threshold at about 73°10’S characterized by several unconformities (up to four evident), and a wide lateral continuity that tapers toward the axes of the basin where a hummocky morphology prevails. The Central sector has a very articulated morphology with accumulations of non-stratified sediment (diamicton) that rise for 10-20 m and whose widths vary between 100 and 1000 m. The sedimentary series shows at least three planar unconformities and aggrading deposits within a thickness of about 100 ms (twtt), typical of phases of glacial exaration. On the outer shelf, starting from the shelf break, we recognized massive hummocky deposits formed by the reworking of the ice front during successive phases of advance and retreat, while the upper slope is characterized by prograding deposits related to successive advances and retreats of the sheet, which often involved consistent gravitative phenomena (Anderson 1999; Bart et al. 2000; Fanucci et al. 1993; Spezie et al. 1993). The ... Conference Object Antarc* Antarctica Ross Sea Università degli Studi di Genova: CINECA IRIS Drygalski ENVELOPE(-61.000,-61.000,-64.717,-64.717) Drygalski Basin ENVELOPE(166.500,166.500,-74.833,-74.833) Ross Sea Western Basin
institution Open Polar
collection Università degli Studi di Genova: CINECA IRIS
op_collection_id ftunivgenova
language English
topic Late Quaternary
sediments
seismostratigraphy
Western Basin
Ross Sea
Antarctica
spellingShingle Late Quaternary
sediments
seismostratigraphy
Western Basin
Ross Sea
Antarctica
CORRADI, NICOLA
FIERRO, GIULIANO
IVALDI, ROBERTA
PITTA', ANTONELLA
Finocchiaro, F.
Late Quaternary sedimentation in the Northern Western Basin, Ross Sea, Antarctica: seismostratigraphic features and sedimentary properties of calibrated cores
topic_facet Late Quaternary
sediments
seismostratigraphy
Western Basin
Ross Sea
Antarctica
description The northern Western Basin is a sector of the continental shelf of the Western Ross Sea (Fig. 1) that is considered to be the natural northward extension of the Drygalski Basin by many authors. The literature provides a general model of the evolution of the basin and the recent papers of Anderson (1999) and Bart et al. (2000) propose a seismic stratigraphy for the post-Miocene sedimentation. However, the sedimentary processes during the Late Quaternary and, in particular, the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) are still little understood (Brambati et al. 2001). The preliminary results of the seismic survey (Huntec Deep Tow Boomer, Sub Bottom Profiler 3.5 kHz and 0.2-1kJ Sparker multi-array 150 dip), calibrated with the on-board data of the sediment cores (magnetic susceptibility and physical properties), permitted us to delineate the morphological and seismostratigraphic features of the first few meters of sediment and to divide the basin into four sectors. The longitudinal and cross sections of the southern sector of the basin show a morphological threshold at about 73°10’S characterized by several unconformities (up to four evident), and a wide lateral continuity that tapers toward the axes of the basin where a hummocky morphology prevails. The Central sector has a very articulated morphology with accumulations of non-stratified sediment (diamicton) that rise for 10-20 m and whose widths vary between 100 and 1000 m. The sedimentary series shows at least three planar unconformities and aggrading deposits within a thickness of about 100 ms (twtt), typical of phases of glacial exaration. On the outer shelf, starting from the shelf break, we recognized massive hummocky deposits formed by the reworking of the ice front during successive phases of advance and retreat, while the upper slope is characterized by prograding deposits related to successive advances and retreats of the sheet, which often involved consistent gravitative phenomena (Anderson 1999; Bart et al. 2000; Fanucci et al. 1993; Spezie et al. 1993). The ...
author2 Futterer D. K.
Corradi, Nicola
Fierro, Giuliano
Finocchiaro, F.
Ivaldi, Roberta
Pitta', Antonella
format Conference Object
author CORRADI, NICOLA
FIERRO, GIULIANO
IVALDI, ROBERTA
PITTA', ANTONELLA
Finocchiaro, F.
author_facet CORRADI, NICOLA
FIERRO, GIULIANO
IVALDI, ROBERTA
PITTA', ANTONELLA
Finocchiaro, F.
author_sort CORRADI, NICOLA
title Late Quaternary sedimentation in the Northern Western Basin, Ross Sea, Antarctica: seismostratigraphic features and sedimentary properties of calibrated cores
title_short Late Quaternary sedimentation in the Northern Western Basin, Ross Sea, Antarctica: seismostratigraphic features and sedimentary properties of calibrated cores
title_full Late Quaternary sedimentation in the Northern Western Basin, Ross Sea, Antarctica: seismostratigraphic features and sedimentary properties of calibrated cores
title_fullStr Late Quaternary sedimentation in the Northern Western Basin, Ross Sea, Antarctica: seismostratigraphic features and sedimentary properties of calibrated cores
title_full_unstemmed Late Quaternary sedimentation in the Northern Western Basin, Ross Sea, Antarctica: seismostratigraphic features and sedimentary properties of calibrated cores
title_sort late quaternary sedimentation in the northern western basin, ross sea, antarctica: seismostratigraphic features and sedimentary properties of calibrated cores
publisher Alfred-Wegener-Stiftung
publishDate 2003
url http://hdl.handle.net/11567/846257
long_lat ENVELOPE(-61.000,-61.000,-64.717,-64.717)
ENVELOPE(166.500,166.500,-74.833,-74.833)
geographic Drygalski
Drygalski Basin
Ross Sea
Western Basin
geographic_facet Drygalski
Drygalski Basin
Ross Sea
Western Basin
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
Ross Sea
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
Ross Sea
op_relation ispartofbook:Antarctic Contributions to Global Earth Science
ISAES-IX - 9th International Symposium on Antarctic Earth Sciences
journal:TERRA NOSTRA
http://hdl.handle.net/11567/846257
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