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Late Quaternary evolution of channel and lobe complexes of Monterey Fan

January 1, 2004

The modern Monterey submarine fan, one of the largest deep-water deposits off the western US, is composed of two major turbidite systems: the Neogene Lower Turbidite System (LTS) and the late Quarternary Upper Turbidite System (UTS). The areally extensive LTS is a distal deposit with low-relief, poorly defined channels, overbank, and lower-fan elements. The younger UTS comprises almost half of the total fan volume and was initiated in the late Pleistocene from canyons in the Monterey Bay area. Rapidly prograding high-relief, channel-levee complexes dominated deposition early in the UTS with periodic avulsion events. In the last few 100 ka, much of the sediment bypassed the northern fan as a result of allocyclic controls, and deposition is simultaneously occuring on a sandy lobe with low-relief channels and on an adjacent detached muddier lobe built from reconfinement of overbank flow from the northern high-relief channels. During the relatively short-lived UTS deposition, at least seven different channel types and two lobe types were formed. This study provides a significant reinterpretation of the depositional history of Monterey Fan by incorporating all available unpublished geophysical data.

Publication Year 2004
Title Late Quaternary evolution of channel and lobe complexes of Monterey Fan
DOI 10.1016/j.margeo.2004.03.001
Authors Andrea Fildani, William R. Normark
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Marine Geology
Index ID 70121218
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Coastal and Marine Geology Program