The Amazon River extends from the Andes to the Atlantic continental margin and has the world's highest flux of suspended sediment and terrestrial organic carbon to the ocean, leading to the formation of one of the world's largest deep-sea turbiditic fans, 10 km thick, down to water depths of 4500 m. The fan is undergoing gravitational collapse,...
-
October 30, 2023 (v1)Conference paperUploaded on: November 25, 2023
-
October 8, 2024 (v1)Conference paper
A recently acquired multidisciplinary dataset comprising acoustic surveys (high-resolution sub-bottom profiles, multi-beam bathymetry, and broad band mid-water echo sounder), geochemistry (gas chemical and isotopic composition, porewater chemistry), and sedimentology (core lithology and X-ray CT) in the area of the Landsort deep (450 m of...
Uploaded on: October 9, 2024 -
October 30, 2023 (v1)Conference paper
The submarine fans of large rivers are important sites of long-term carbon storage, but are also settings in which the rapid deposition of organic-rich sediment drives linked processes of gas and gas hydrate formation, fluid expulsion, mass failure and gravity tectonism. The Ama- zon River culminates in one of the world's largest deep-sea fans,...
Uploaded on: November 25, 2023