Submarine landslides on the north continental slope of the South China Sea

被引:0
作者
Weiwei Wang
Dawei Wang
Shiguo Wu
David Völker
Hongliu Zeng
Guanqiang Cai
Qingping Li
机构
[1] China University of Petroleum (East China),College of Information and Control Engineering
[2] Chinese Academy of Sciences,Laboratory of Marine Geophysics and Georeource, Institute of Deep
[3] Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology,Sea Science and Engineering
[4] University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,College of Earth Sciences
[5] University of Bremen,MARUM Center for Marine Environmental Sciences
[6] The University of Texas at Austin,Bureau of Economic Geology
[7] Guangzhou Marine Geology Survey,undefined
[8] Research Center of China National Offshore Oil Corporation,undefined
来源
Journal of Ocean University of China | 2018年 / 17卷
关键词
South China Sea; submarine landslides; seismic identification; triggering mechanism;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Recent and paleo-submarine landslides are widely distributed within strata in deep-water areas along continental slopes, uplifts, and carbonate platforms on the north continental margin of the South China Sea (SCS). In this paper, high-resolution 3D seismic data and multibeam data based on seismic sedimentology and geomorphology are employed to assist in identifying submarine landslides. In addition, deposition models are proposed that are based on specific geological structures and features, and which illustrate the local stress field over entire submarine landslides in deep-water areas of the SCS. The SCS is one of the largest fluvial sediment sinks in enclosed or semi-enclosed marginal seas worldwide. It therefore provides a set of preconditions for the formation of submarine landslides, including rapid sediment accumulation, formation of gas hydrates, and fluid overpressure. A new concept involving temporal and spatial analyses is tested to construct a relationship between submarine landslides and different time scale trigger mechanisms, and three mechanisms are discussed in the context of spatial scale and temporal frequency: evolution of slope gradient and overpressure, global environmental changes, and tectonic events. Submarine landslides that are triggered by tectonic events are the largest but occur less frequently, while submarine landslides triggered by the combination of slope gradient and over-pressure evolution are the smallest but most frequently occurring events. In summary, analysis shows that the formation of submarine landslides is a complex process involving the operation of different factors on various time scales.
引用
收藏
页码:83 / 100
页数:17
相关论文
共 303 条
[1]  
Biscontin G.(2004)Seismic triggering of submarine slides in soft cohesive soil deposits Marine Geology 203 341-354
[2]  
Pestana J. M.(2009)A review of kinematic indicators from mass-transport complexes using 3D seismic data Marine and Petroleum Geology 26 1132-1151
[3]  
Nadim F.(2000)Denudation history of onshore central Vietnam: Constraints on the Cenozoic evolution of the western margin of the South China Sea Tectonophysics 322 265-277
[4]  
Bull S.(2014)Insights into submarine geohazards from breaks in subsea telecommunication cables Oceanography 27 58-67
[5]  
Cartwright J.(2014)A brief review of 1:1000000 marine geological survey and mapping results of the Hainan sheet in the South China Sea Marine Geology & Quaternary Geology 34 83-96
[6]  
Huuse M.(2010)Rifting of the South China Sea: New perspectives Petroleum Geoscience 16 273-282
[7]  
Carter A.(2008)Mass wasting processes in the western Wilkes Land margin: Possible implications for East Antarctic glacial history Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 260 77-91
[8]  
Roques D.(2000)Overpressure and fluid flow in the New Jersey continental slope: Implications for slope failure and cold seeps Science 289 288-291
[9]  
Bristow C. S.(2008)Geometry of a major slump structure in the Storegga slide region offshore western Norway Norwegian Journal of Geology 88 1-11
[10]  
Carter L.(2008)Pore pressure penetrometers document high overpressure near the seafloor where multiple submarine landslides have occurred on the continental slope, offshore Louisiana, Gulf of Mexico Earth and Planetary Letters 269 309-324