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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/22284
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Title: | Contourite drift off Madeira Island (Northeast Atlantic) and implications to Cenozoic bottom-current circulation |
Authors: | Roque, Cristina Hernández-Molina, Javier Madureira, Pedro Quartau, Rui Magalhães, Vitor Hugo Carrara, Gabriela Santos de Campos, Aldino Brandão, Filipe Vásquez, Juan Tomás Somoza, Luis |
Keywords: | Countourite Madeira Island Cenozoic bottom-current circulation |
Issue Date: | 2017 |
Publisher: | EGU |
Abstract: | During the last decades several works have been carried out on the morphosedimentary processes driven by
bottom-currents in several continental margins and abyssal plains worldwide. However these processes still
remain poorly understood on deep-water settings and particularly around oceanic islands. This study is focused
on the offshore of Madeira Island (Portugal), which is located in the Northeast Atlantic at about 700 km west
of NW Africa. The interpretation of a newly acquired dataset, composed of multibeam bathymetry, Parasound
echosounder profiles and multichannel seismic reflection profiles, allowed to identify a giant (about 385 km long
and over than 175 km wide) plastered contourite drift, called the “Madeira Drift”, developing along the lower
slope of the Madeira plateau. It formed on top of a major erosional unconformity that truncates the underlying
pelagic deposits, which drape over faulted blocks of Cretaceous oceanic crust. The Madeira Drift is composed
of three main regional seismic units showing a predominant aggradational stacking pattern, without evidence
of major lateral migration thought time. Its internal configuration indicates that it was build-up by a northwards
flowing deep bottom current. These characteristics suggests that an almost persistent and stable water mass has
been responsible for its edification trough time. While the precise age of this contourite drift is undetermined,
some chronostratigraphic constraints can be determined based upon published works regarding seafloor magnetic
anomalies (e.g. Bird et al., 2007), DSDP Site 136drilling data (Hayes et al., 1978). Attending to this, we propose
that the possible onset of Madeira Drift must have occurred after Late Cretaceous, within the tertiary period, and
quite probably in the Late Eocene / Eocene-Oligocene transition. Based on them is commonly accepted that an
enhanced proto-Antarctic BottomWater (AABW) started to circulate at that time we considered this water mass as
the best candidate for the build-up of Madeira Drift. Thus, the Madeira drift represents an exceptional sedimentary
record in this sector of the Northeast Atlantic for the earliest phases of the proto-AABW water mass circulation. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/22284 |
Type: | lecture |
Appears in Collections: | ICT - Comunicações - Em Congressos Científicos Internacionais
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