Interaction of a deep-sea current with a blind submarine canyon (Mar del Plata Canyon, Argentina)

The Mar del Plata (MdP) Canyon at the Argentine continental margin is incorporated into a major contourite depositional system, built by the incursion of southern-sourced water masses affecting the seafloor at different waters depths. The new sedimentological, morphological and hydro acoustic data provide novel insights into contour and turbidity current interactions in mid-slope (blind) canyons, which do not have a connection to the shelf or an onshore river system. Such canyons are capable to record climate-related ocean stratification changes, current variability, and slope stability. Three sediment cores were obtained along the MdP Canyon thalweg covering the last 20,000 years and compiled with two cores from the adjacent Ewing Terrace. Turbidity-current activity within the MdP Canyon was limited to the time interval from Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) to the late deglacial. During the LGM and early deglacial, turbidites reached both the proximal sector and the distal northern flank of the canyon. During the late deglacial only the proximal sector was characterized by turbidite deposition. Similarities in mineralogy and grain-size data indicate that the material transported by the turbidity currents originated from the mid-slope Ewing Terrace. Glacial turbidity-current activity was most probably favored by increased sediment supply along the Ewing Terrace from a shallowed and/or enhanced glacial Antarctic Intermediate Water (AAIW) nepheloid layer. These sediments were trapped by the MdP Canyon, in particular at the head area. During the late deglacial, a displacement or limited AAIW nepheloid layer resulted in less sediment transfer along the Ewing Terrace and immediate accumulation in the MdP Canyon head restricting turbidite deposition to the proximal sector of the canyon. In general, contourite-turbidite interactions provide valuable information on variations in thermohaline circulation such as AAIW distribution and current strength.

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