Deep‐water sand transfer by hyperpycnal flows, the Eocene of Spitsbergen, Arctic Norway

Author:

Grundvåg Sten‐Andreas12ORCID,Helland‐Hansen William3,Johannessen Erik P.4,Eggenhuisen Joris5,Pohl Florian6ORCID,Spychala Yvonne7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geosciences UiT The Arctic University of Norway P.O. Box 6050 Langnes N‐9037 Tromsø Norway

2. Department of Arctic Geology University Centre in Svalbard P.O. Box 156 N‐9171 Longyearbyen Norway

3. Department of Earth Science University of Bergen P.O. Box 7800 N‐5020 Bergen Norway

4. EP Skolithos Sisikveien 36 N‐4022 Stavanger Norway

5. Department of Earth Science University of Utrecht 3584 CS Utrecht The Netherlands

6. Marine School of Biological and Marine Sciences University of Plymouth Drake Circus PL4 8AA Plymouth UK

7. Institute of Geology Leibniz Universität Hannover Germany

Abstract

AbstractFlood‐generated hyperpycnal flows are dense, sediment‐laden, turbulent flows that can form long‐lived, bottom‐hugging turbidity currents, which undoubtedly transport large volumes of fine‐grained sediments into the ocean. However, their ability in transferring sand into deep‐water basins is debated. This study presents sedimentological evidence of sandy hyperpycnal flow deposits (hyperpycnites) in a series of basin floor lobe complexes associated with a progradational shelf margin in the Eocene of Spitsbergen, Arctic Norway. Four coexisting types of sediment gravity flow deposits are recognized: (i) sandy hyperpycnites deposited by quasi‐steady hyperpycnal flows; (ii) turbidites deposited by waning, surge‐type turbidity currents; (iii) hybrid event beds deposited by transitional flows; and (iv) mass transport deposits emplaced during rare slope failures. The abundance of thick‐bedded massive sandstones, frequent bed amalgamation, the distribution of hyperpycnites across the lobes and the abundance and systematic occurrence of plant‐rich hybrid event beds and associated climbing ripple cross‐laminated beds in the lobe fringes, suggest that hyperpycnal flow was the most important mechanism driving lobe progradation. Shelf‐edge positioned fluvial channels linked to the basin floor lobe complexes via deeply incised, sandstone‐filled slope channels, suggest that rivers fed directly onto the slopes where their dense, sand‐laden discharges readily generated quasi‐steady hyperpycnal flows that regularly reached the basin floor. The composite architecture and complex waxing–waning flow facies configuration of the hyperpycnites is consistent with sustained and concomitant suspension and traction deposition under fluctuating subcritical to supercritical conditions. Similar sandstone beds occur on the clinoform slopes, indicating that the hyperpycnal flows operated likewise on the slope. Plant‐rich hybrid event beds indicate transformation of initially turbulent flows by relative enrichment of clay and plant material via progressive sand deposition to such an extent that it suppressed turbulence. The multi‐faceted character of the hyperpycnites reported here, challenges traditional beliefs that hyperpycnites assumingly preserve the waxing–waning signal of single‐peaked floods.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Stratigraphy,Geology,General Medicine

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