GIANT FLUTE-LIKE SCOUR AND OTHER EROSIONAL FEATURES FORMED BY THE 1929 GRAND-BANKS TURBIDITY-CURRENT

Academic Article

Abstract

  • Valley-floor channels typically 1 km wide and 10m deep contain series of closed depressions that occasionally deepen to 30 m. These are also interpreted as erosional scours, analogous to pools cut on the beds of bedrock rivers. The large flute was probably formed by detached flow enlarging an initial scour depression. Such scours probably play an important role in channel-floor erosion, increasing the volume of sediment transported by large turbidity currents.
  • Authors

  • Hughes Clarke, John
  • SHOR, AN
  • PIPER, DJW
  • CLARKE, JEH
  • Mayer, Larry
  • Status

    Publication Date

  • August 1990
  • Has Subject Area

    Published In

  • Sedimentology  Journal
  • Digital Object Identifier (doi)

    Start Page

  • 631
  • End Page

  • 645
  • Volume

  • 37
  • Issue

  • 4