EP12A-06
Sediment Pathways Across Trench Slopes: Results From Numerical Modeling

Monday, 14 December 2015: 11:45
2005 (Moscone West)
Marie-Helene Cormier1, Leonardo Seeber2, Cecilia M McHugh3, Toshiya Fujiwara4, Toshiya Kanamatsu4 and John W King5, (1)University of Rhode Island Narragansett Bay, Narragansett, RI, United States, (2)Lamont-Doherty Earth Obs, Palisades, NY, United States, (3)CUNY Queens College, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Flushing, NY, United States, (4)JAMSTEC Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Kanagawa, Japan, (5)Univ Rhode Island, Narragansett, RI, United States
Abstract:
Until the 2011 Mw9.0 Tohoku earthquake, the role of earthquakes as agents of sediment dispersal and deposition at erosional trenches was largely under-appreciated. A series of cruises carried out after the 2011 event has revealed a variety of unsuspected sediment transport mechanisms, such as tsunami-triggered sheet turbidites, suggesting that great earthquakes may in fact be important agents for dispersing sediments across trench slopes. To complement these observational data, we have modeled the pathways of sediments across the trench slope based on bathymetric grids. Our approach assumes that transport direction is controlled by slope azimuth only, and ignores obstacles smaller than 0.6-1 km; these constraints are meant to approximate the behavior of turbidites. Results indicate that (1) most pathways issued from the upper slope terminate near the top of the small frontal wedge, and thus do not reach the trench axis; (2) in turn, sediments transported to the trench axis are likely derived from the small frontal wedge or from the subducting Pacific plate. These results are consistent with the stratigraphy imaged in seismic profiles, which reveals that the slope apron does not extend as far as the frontal wedge, and that the thickness of sediments at the trench axis is similar to that of the incoming Pacific plate.

We further applied this modeling technique to the Cascadia, Nankai, Middle-America, and Sumatra trenches. Where well-defined canyons carve the trench slopes, sediments from the upper slope may routinely reach the trench axis (e.g., off Costa Rica and Cascadia). In turn, slope basins that are isolated from the canyons drainage systems must mainly accumulate locally-derived sediments. Therefore, their turbiditic infill may be diagnostic of seismic activity only – and not from storm or flood activity. If correct, this would make isolated slope basins ideal targets for paleoseismological investigation.