Dating submarine landslides using the transient response of gas hydrate stability
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28775Date
2023-03-02Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Portnov, Aleksei D; You, Kehua; Flemings, Peter B.; Cook, Ann E.; Heidari, Mahdi; Sawyer, Derek E.; Bünz, StefanAbstract
Submarine landslides are prevalent on the modern-day seafloor, yet an elusive problem
is constraining the timing of past slope failure. We present a novel age-dating technique
based on perturbations to underlying gas hydrate stability caused by slide-impacted seafloor changes. Using three-dimensional (3-D) seismic data, we mapped an irregular bottom
simulating reflection (BSR) underneath a submarine landslide in the Orca Basin, Gulf of
Mexico. The irregular BSR mimics the pre-slide seafloor geometry rather than the modern
bathymetry. Therefore, we suggest that the gas hydrate stability zone (GHSZ) is still adjusting
to the post-slide sediment temperature. We applied transient conductive heat-flow modeling
to constrain the response of the GHSZ to the slope failure, which yielded a most likely age of
ca. 8 ka, demonstrating that gas hydrate can respond to landslides even on multimillennial
time scales. We further provide a generalized analytical solution that can be used to remotely
date submarine slides in the absence of traditional dating techniques
Publisher
Geological Society of AmericaCitation
Portnov AD, You, Flemings PB, Cook AE, Heidari M, Sawyer, Bünz S. Dating submarine landslides using the transient response of gas hydrate stability. Geology. 2023Metadata
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