Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

A geomechanical approach for the genesis of sediment undulations on the Adriatic shelf

April 19, 2008

This study is among the first to examine the genesis of the seafloor and subsurface undulations on the Adriatic continental shelf by integrating stratigraphic information and in situ and laboratory geotechnical measurements. Interpretation of sediment behavior is based on a 32-m-long borehole crossing (1) a possible shear plane and (2) a silty clay layer at about 20 m below seafloor (mbsf) on which sediment undulations are rooted and could be interpreted as a potential weak layer succession. Our main results in terms of triggering mechanism for the observed undulations show that under an earthquake, liquefaction and/or failure of the silty-clay sediments (weak layer) leading to deformation of the upper more cohesive sediments is possible only when such a layer is buried by less than 5 m. For greater burial thicknesses, this silty clay becomes stable under the confining lithostatic pressure exerted by the overlying sediment. This work shows that the seafloor and subsurface undulations observed in the study area are most probably the result of an early deformation process of the seafloor followed by a depositional process.

Publication Year 2008
Title A geomechanical approach for the genesis of sediment undulations on the Adriatic shelf
DOI 10.1029/2007GC001822
Authors Nabil Sultan, Antonio Cattaneo, Roger Urgeles, Homa Lee, Jacques Locat, Fabio Trincardi, Serge Berne, Miquel Canals, Sara Lafuerza
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
Index ID 70236958
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse