Supplementary information files for "Carbon and sediment fluxes inhibited in the submarine Congo Canyon by landslide-damming"
Supplementary files for article "Carbon and sediment fluxes inhibited in the submarine Congo Canyon by landslide-damming"
Landslide-dams, which are often transient, can strongly affect the geomorphology, and sediment and geochemical fluxes, within subaerial fluvial systems. The potential occurrence and impact of analogous landslide-dams in submarine canyons has, however, been difficult to determine due to a scarcity of sufficiently time-resolved observations. Here we present repeat bathymetric surveys of a major submarine canyon, the Congo Canyon, offshore West Africa, from 2005 and 2019. We show how an ~0.09 km3 canyon-flank landslide dammed the canyon, causing temporary storage of a further ~0.4 km3 of sediment, containing ~5 Mt of primarily terrestrial organic carbon. The trapped sediment was up to 150 m thick and extended >26 km up-canyon of the landslide-dam. This sediment has been transported by turbidity currents whose sediment load is trapped by the landslide-dam. Our results suggest canyon-flank collapses can be important controls on canyon morphology as they can generate or contribute to the formation of meander cut-offs, knickpoints and terraces. Flank collapses have the potential to modulate sediment and geochemical fluxes to the deep sea and may impact efficiency of major submarine canyons as transport conduits and locations of organic carbon sequestration. This has potential consequences for deep-sea ecosystems that rely on organic carbon transported through submarine canyons.
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Funding
Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowship (ECF-2018-267)
Morphodynamic Stickiness: the influence of physical and biological cohesion in sedimentary systems
European Research Council
Find out more...Submarine LAndslides and Their impact on European continental margins
European Commission
Find out more...Royal Society Research Fellowship (DHF\R1\180166)
European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement no. 899546
How do deep-ocean turbidity currents behave that form the largest sediment accumulations on Earth?
Natural Environment Research Council
Find out more...Developing a Global Listening Network for Turbidity Currents and Seafloor Processes
Natural Environment Research Council
Find out more...How was a thousand kilometre cable-breaking submarine flow triggered by an exceptional Congo River flood?
Natural Environment Research Council
Find out more...Marine LTSS: Climate Linked Atlantic Sector Science
Natural Environment Research Council
Find out more...New field-scale calibration for turbidity current impact modelling
Natural Environment Research Council
Find out more...NERC KE ERIIP Fellowship - Environmental risks to infrastructure: Identifying and filling the gaps
Natural Environment Research Council
Find out more...History
School
- Social Sciences and Humanities