Title of article :
Bathymetry of the Levant basin: interaction of salt-tectonics and surficial mass movements
Author/Authors :
Gvirtzman، نويسنده , , Zohar and Reshef، نويسنده , , Moshe and Buch-Leviatan، نويسنده , , Orna and Groves-Gidney، نويسنده , , Gavrielle and Karcz، نويسنده , , Zvi and Makovsky، نويسنده , , Yizhaq and Ben-Avraham، نويسنده , , Zvi، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
Abstract :
A new high resolution bathymetric map of the Levant Basin between Israel and the Eratosthenes Seamount reveals previously undetected folds, faults and channels. The map facilitates a regional map-view analysis of structures that were previously examined only in cross section. The systematic mapping of morpho-structural elements in the entire basin is followed by a kinematic interpretation that distinguished between two main processes sculpting the seabed from bottom and top: salt tectonics and sediment transport. We show that the contractional domain related to salt tectonics is far more complex than previously thought. Ridges, previously interpreted as contractional folds are, in fact, surficial undulations of the seabed reminiscent of sediment waves. Moreover, other folds previously interpreted as downdip contraction of the westward gliding Plio-Quaternary section are, in some parts of the basin, caused by updip climbing of this section eastwards as a result of the regional pattern of salt flow away from the Nile Cone. In the context of sediment transport, we show that the northern Sinai continental slope is covered by a dense net of turbidite channels, whereas the Levant slope has no channels at all. Particularly interesting is the Levant Turbidite Channel, described and named here for the first time. This feature begins at the southeastern corner of the Mediterranean at water depths of ~ 1100 m, continues along the valley between the Sinai and Levant slopes, and reaches the deepest part of the basin, in water depths of ~ 2500 m, northeast of the Eratosthenes seamount. However, this prominent feature cannot be explained by the current drainage, consisting of two minor rivers that enter the basin at that point, and thus most likely reflects periods of wetter climate and/or lower sea-level, when these rivers were more active and possibly connected to the submarine channel system.
Keywords :
Landslides , Bathymetry , Nile , Levant basin , Salt tectonics , Levant Turbidite Channel , Mediterranean
Journal title :
Marine Geology
Journal title :
Marine Geology