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Seabed seismographs reveal duration and structure of longest runout sediment flows on earth

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posted on 2025-05-09, 08:03 authored by Megan L. Baker, Peter J. Talling, Richard Burnett, Ed L. Pope, Sean C. Ruffell, Morelia Urlaub, Michael A. Clare, Jennifer Jenkins, Michael Dietze, Jeffrey Neasham, Ricardo Silva Jacinto, Sophie Hage, Martin Hasenhündl, Steve M. Simmons, Catharina J. Heerema, Maarten S. Heijnen, Pascal Kunath, Matthieu J. B. Cartigny, Claire McGhee, Dan ParsonsDan Parsons
Turbidity currents carve the deepest canyons on Earth, deposit its largest sediment accumulations, and break seabed telecommunication cables. Powerful canyon-flushing turbidity currents break sensors placed in their path, making them notoriously challenging to measure, and thus poorly understood. This study provides the first remote measurements of canyon-flushing flows, using ocean-bottom seismographs located outside the flow's destructive path, revolutionizing flow monitoring. We recorded the internal dynamics of the longest sediment flows yet monitored on Earth, which traveled >1,000 km down the Congo Canyon-Channel at 3.7–7.6 m s−1 and lasted >3 weeks. These observations allow us to test fundamental models for turbidity current behavior and reveal that flows contain dense and fast frontal-zones up to ∼400 km in length. These frontal-zones developed near-uniform durations and speeds for hundreds of kilometres despite substantial seabed erosion, enabling flows to rapidly transport prodigious volumes of organic carbon, sediment, and warm water to the deep-sea.

Funding

How do deep-ocean turbidity currents behave that form the largest sediment accumulations on Earth?

Natural Environment Research Council

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Developing a Global Listening Network for Turbidity Currents and Seafloor Processes

Natural Environment Research Council

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Marine LTSS: Climate Linked Atlantic Sector Science

Natural Environment Research Council

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Leverhulme Trust. Grant Numbers: ECF-2021-566, ECF-2018-267

HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council. Grant Number: 899546

Royal Society. Grant Number: DHF\R1\180166

History

School

  • Social Sciences and Humanities

Published in

Geophysical Research Letters

Volume

51

Issue

23

Publisher

American Geophysical Union

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Author(s)

Publisher statement

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited

Acceptance date

2024-11-06

Publication date

2024-11-28

Copyright date

2024

ISSN

0094-8276

eISSN

1944-8007

Language

  • en

Depositor

Mrs Gretta Cole, impersonating Prof Dan Parsons. Deposit date: 7 January 2025

Article number

e2024GL111078

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