Continental Margin Sedimentation 2007
DOI: 10.1002/9781444304398.ch7
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Seascape Evolution on Clastic Continental Shelves and Slopes

Abstract: The morphology of clastic continental margins directly reflects their formative processes. These include interactions between plate movements and isostasy, which establish the characteristic stairstep shape of margins. Other factors are thermal and loading-induced subsidence, compaction and faulting/folding, which create and/or destroy accommodation space for sediment supplied by rivers and glaciers. These processes are primary controls on margin size and shape. Rivers and glaciers can also directly sculpt the… Show more

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Cited by 56 publications
(58 citation statements)
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References 148 publications
(209 reference statements)
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“…Valley evolution in our study area appears to be most active when sediment influx to the slope is greatest, which coincides with sea-level lowstands. Features 5 and 6, for example, have likely gone through several phases of erosion and deposition as sea-level changed and shelf-edge depocentres shifted.These patterns have been widely reported in the literature (Daly, 1936; Felix and Gorsline, 1971;Twichell et al, 1977;Vail et al, 1977;Stanley et al, 1984;Posamentier et al, 1988;Bertoni and Cartwright, 2005;Pratson et al, 2009). Submarine channel inception via a series of scours has been documented in many recent studies (Pirmez and Imran, 2003; Fildani and Normark, 2004; Fildani et al, 2006;Normark et al, 2009;Kostic, 2011; Covault et al, 2012; Fildani et al, 2013), as has the development of channel-levée systems in the channel marginal regions (Fildani et al, 2006(Fildani et al, , 2013Armitage et al, 2012).…”
supporting
confidence: 73%
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“…Valley evolution in our study area appears to be most active when sediment influx to the slope is greatest, which coincides with sea-level lowstands. Features 5 and 6, for example, have likely gone through several phases of erosion and deposition as sea-level changed and shelf-edge depocentres shifted.These patterns have been widely reported in the literature (Daly, 1936; Felix and Gorsline, 1971;Twichell et al, 1977;Vail et al, 1977;Stanley et al, 1984;Posamentier et al, 1988;Bertoni and Cartwright, 2005;Pratson et al, 2009). Submarine channel inception via a series of scours has been documented in many recent studies (Pirmez and Imran, 2003; Fildani and Normark, 2004; Fildani et al, 2006;Normark et al, 2009;Kostic, 2011; Covault et al, 2012; Fildani et al, 2013), as has the development of channel-levée systems in the channel marginal regions (Fildani et al, 2006(Fildani et al, , 2013Armitage et al, 2012).…”
supporting
confidence: 73%
“…First, canyon elongation is generally higher downslope, which contrasts with the predominant headward development of submarine canyons reported in numerous models (e.g. Pratson et al, 1994Pratson et al, , 2009). Second, the canyon goes through an early stage of rapid incision, where the rate of change of depth is much higher than that of the width, and where wall erosion is minimal.…”
Section: Accepted M Manuscriptmentioning
confidence: 60%
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