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Submarine canyons and slides in the central-west Otway Basin: their morphology, genesis, links to groundwater discharge and tsunamigenic potential

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De Deckker, Patrick
Nanson, Rachael

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Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Abstract

The morphology and development of several submarine canyons offshore southeast South Australia and western Victoria are described. The existence of three of those canyons had been foreshadowed in 1963 by N. Boutakoff, who thought them to be linked to ancient courses of the Glenelg River. These canyons occur on the outer continental shelf where their heads are situated in depths shallower than 1000 m. Sinuous channels are visible within two of the canyon heads, indicating that water and sediment may still travel downslope and cause erosion, and thus are geologically recent. Several other canyons are also documented and named. Two canyons are confined to depths below 3000 m; they may be much older and seem not to be linked to ancient river courses. They are also oblique to the upper canyons. The other characteristic feature of the area is the presence of numerous undersea slides. These occur at three specific depths (∼1200, ∼1500 and ∼1800 m) and are coincident with stratigraphic horizons in which continental groundwater flows have been identified in adjacent exploratory oil and gas wells drilled into the continental shelf. Sapping of groundwater may likely have occurred during very wet periods inland. We suggest that these undersea slides could be the first step in the formation of deep-sea canyons that are not necessarily linked to ancient river courses. We also postulate that the ‘sliding’ of large piles of sediment down the continental slope has tsunamigenic potential and may have occurred during significant wet climate on land.KEY POINTS Several deep-sea canyons and numerous submarine slides are documented along the continental shelf offshore the coastline of western Victoria and southeast South Australia in the Otway Basin. Some of these canyons are linked to previous courses of the Glenelg River, which changed over time in response to regional tectonic changes such as faulting and significant upwarping. The orientation of most of these canyons tends to align with ancient terrestrial lineaments that likely extend offshore. Sinuous channels within the upper canyon reaches are clearly visible and not infilled with sediment; they are likely active and linked to ongoing groundwater seepage. It is proposed that the underwater slides are generated by the submarine discharge of continental groundwater on the continental slope, at three specific water depths with discharge associated with particular lithologies. These slides may still be active. Superimposed slides may engender the formation of new canyons. The volume of some of these undersea slides is of tsunamigenic scale.

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Australian Journal of Earth Sciences

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2099-12-31
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