SUBMARINE MASS MOVEMENT ON THE EBRO SLOPE D. CASAS, G. ERCILLA, B. ALONSO, J. BARAZA CSIC, Institut de Ciencies del Mar. Passeig Marítim de la Barceloneta, 37-49 08003 BARCELONA, SPAIN H. J. LEE U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), Mail Stop 999, 345 Middlefield Road, Menlo Park, CA 94025, USA A. MALDONADO Instituto Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra (CSIC), Facultad de Ciencias, 18002 GRANADA, SPAIN Abstract Mass movement is an important process controlling the Quaternary sedimentary structure of the Ebro continental slope. Seismic indicates that about 37% of the slope surface is affected by mass movement features, which are variable in distribution, type, size and morphology. Physical and geotechnical properties define two areas: upper slope and the lower slope. The geotechnical modelling only explains certain aspects of massmovement features, but it is insufficient to explain their variability. In order to have a good knowledge of geotechnical and sedimentary characteristics of the area and a good approach to a future mapping of instability hazard it is required study individually each depositional environment and failure event. Keywords: Ebro, Continental slope, Submarine mass movements, geotechnical modelling. 1. Introduction The Ebro continental margin, in the Spanish NW Mediterranean Sea, is a NE-SW trending passive and prograding margin initiated during the late Oligocene (Dañobeitia, Alonso, & Maldonado, 1990). The Quaternary stratigraphic architecture of the shelf is mainly made up of regressive deltas that extends to the continental slope (Farran & Maldonado, 1990). The continental slope is characterised by the formation of submarine canyons due to the action of mass movement processes (Farran & Maldonado, 1990; Alonso, Díaz, Farran, Giró, Maldonado & Vázquez, 1984), and the base-of-slope by the formation of turbidite channel-levee complexes (Alonso & Maldonado, 1990). These sedimentary systems were mainly developed during the sea-level falls and lowstand stages (Alonso & Maldonado, 1990). Low energy, hemipelagic sedimentation prevailed over the entire margin during the high sea-level periods like the present (Alonso & Maldonado, 1990; Baraza et al., 1990; Nelson & Maldonado, 1990). Today, the Ebro continental slope is not an active depositional environment because most of the sediment supplied by the river is trapped on the dams upstream and in the deltaic environment (Palanques, Plana & Maldonado, 1989). 393 394 Casas et al. Figure 1. Map of location of the study area and bathymetry of Ebro margin (grey lines) showing the three geographic sectors (northern, central and southern) defined on the slope, and the different mass-movement features seismically identified on the upper (200 to 500 m water depth) and lower (500 to 1300 m water depth) slope. Black plots represent the position of sediment cores used for the geotechnical study. Morphologically, the Ebro continental slope is a narrow (< 25 km) band with an average gradient of 4.5º and extends from the shelf break at 160±20 m down to 1100 ± 200 m water depth (Fig.1). It is characterised by the presence of numerous morphological irregularities mostly in the form of gullies, short and straight submarine canyons and intervalley banks (Field & Gardner, 1990). The Ebro continental slope has been divided into three sectors, northern, central an southern, which are characterised by a relative decreasing width and increasing slope gradients from north to south, and a more important development of submarine canyons in the central sector (Fig.1). Submarine Mass Movement on the Ebro Slope 395 2. Types of mass movement features The existence of recent mass movement features on the Ebro continental slope can be recognised, from a seismic point of view, based on elements indicative of the disappearance of sediment packages and by depositional bodies formed by remobilised sediment. The disappearance of sediment packages comprises erosive surfaces associated to submarine canyons, and slide scars. The remobilised sediment comprise different types of mass-movements, from slide to mass-flow deposits. The elements indicative of mass-movement features are grouped into two groups based on their environmental locations: (1) erosive surfaces and slides associated to submarine canyons, and (2) slides and mass-flow deposits on the open continental slope. 2.1. EROSIVE SURFACES AND SLIDES ASSOCIATED TO SUBMARINE CANYONS Submarine canyons are the main morphologic features shaping the Ebro continental slope and their erosive character shows the disappearance of sediment packages. The seismic signatures that reveal this disappearance are: a) truncation of reflectors against the canyon walls; b) several phases of scour and fill features on the canyon floor; and c) presence of gullies (160 to 400 m wide, and 25 to 75 m relief) on the canyon heads and walls, mostly on their upper courses (225 to 440 m water depth). Slides are identified along the courses of the canyons, on their walls and axes. They have dimensions varying between 20 and 80 ms in thickness, and from hundreds of meters to a few kilometres in length. Most of the slided sediments lie adjacent to their respective scars. The presence of the slides originates an asymmetric image of the canyons in cross sections. 2.2. SLIDES AND MASS-FLOW DEPOSITS ON THE OPEN CONTINENTAL SLOPE They occur on the entire Ebro continental slope (Fig. 1). The slides are mostly observed as morphologic relieves on the seafloor, although they are also identified in the subbottom reflectors. They have a large scale range, varying from a few km to tens of km in length. The slides with the smaller dimensions occur mostly along the upper slope. They consist of sigmoidal and lenticular packages, up to 100 ms thick that extend downslope for < 4 km distances. Some of these slides lie adjacent to steep scars (>100 ms vertical offset) against which the upper reflections terminate sharply as result of truncation by failure. Locally, isolated slide scars are also identified. Two large-scale submarine slides also affect the Ebro continental slope: the Columbretes and the Torreblanca slides located on the southern sector and southernmost part of the central sector respectively (Fig.1). The Columbretes slide is rooted on the upper slope at 170 m water depth and ends near the base-of-slope, at approximately 1100 m water depth (Martinez del Olmo, 1984). The slide scar extends from 170 to 454 m water depth and it is characterised by a steep (> 4º) slope surface that truncates the prograding deposits of the shelf break. The slide extends 10 km on a downslope direction and around 20 km across the slope and it is about 150 ms (≈ 113 m) thick of average, which gives a total volume of 23 km3. The thickness of the main body of the 396 Casas et al. slide displays the tendency to decrease toward the northeast in sections along slope (from 150 to 80 ms). In spite of this slides appears as structureless and acoustically chaotic body, the recognisable scar and failure plane points out to consider it as a slump mass (irregular, chaotic) and nor as a mass flow deposits. The Torreblanca slide has been identified on the southernmost part of the central sector (Fig.1) and extends down to the base-of-slope (at least 1350 m water depth). The slide scar occurs at about 360 m water depth and has a vertical offset of approximately 300 m. Between the scarp and the main body of the slide at 655 m depth, there is a small vshaped morphologic feature. This feature corresponds to a tensional depression, characteristic of many submarine landslides. The main body of the Torreblanca slide has a length at least up to 40 km, it displays a longitudinal lens-shape section, and it is seismically defined by discontinuous stratified reflections locally affected by chaotic and hyperbolic facies. The slide involves sediment up to 300 ms thick, affecting a channel-levee complex, and displays a rough upper surface. The upper surface of the sliding mass is rough with features of different genesis. On the most proximal areas, tensile features are developed, and they correspond to normal faults or antithetic faults, and tilted blocks. On the more distal areas, compressional features are developed, such as folds or thrusts, giving to the slided sediment a hummocky morphology. The failure plane of the Torreblanca slide is observed at depths between 90 and 260 m below the top surface of the slide. It appears as a plane quite continuous, concordant with the stratification, highlighted by parallel reflections but with high roughness. Depositional bodies formed by mass-flow deposits have been also recognised and they also display variability in their scale. Canals et al. (2000) have recognised a big mass flow deposits (named BIG’95) that extends from the slope to base of slope covering an area of 2000 km2. It has a recent age, between 10430 and 10250 ybp (Willmot et al, 2001). The small-scale mass flow deposits are characterised by chaotic facies with a lenticular shape up to 0.26 s thick and 8 km long. They usually show a concave-upward base of high reflectivity, a very irregular upper surface. 3. Geotechnical modelling Geotechnical studies were done by Baraza et al. (1990) based on surficial cores (<3 m long) on the central and southern sectors (Figs.1 and 2). Those studies define two different areas on the basis of physical and geotechnical properties: the upper slope (water depth les than 500m) and the lower slope (water depth greater than 500m). On the upper slope, prodeltaic mud with a high silt content and a low to moderate sand content are dominant (Fig. 2). The average water content is 33% dry weight, slightly below the liquid limit, which is about 34%. The plasticity index is about 15% and the sediment is highly to moderately overconsolidated (OCR as high as 8).On the lower slope predominates hemipelagic sediment that has a lower sand and silt content than that of the upper slope (Fig. 2). In addition, the water content is higher (approaching 90%) and is above the liquid limit (ranging from 55 to 75%), the plasticity index is higher and the degree of overconsolidation is lower (OCR 2-3). Vane shear strength and the normalized strength parameter S (ratio of strength to consolidation stress) for normal consolidation are both lower, whereas the cyclic strength degradation factor, Ar, is higher than that of the upper slope. Submarine Mass Movement on the Ebro Slope 397 According to the geotechnical results, the prodeltaic and winnowed deposits of the upper slope are slightly more stable under undrained static loading conditions relative to the hemipelagic deposits of the lower slope. The lower slope is more stable under drained or very long term static conditions. Maximum slopes in our study area appear to be stable under static (gravitational) loading. Nevertheless, localized instability might be produced by a combination of oversteepening and infrequent, intense seismic loading. Comparing the Ebro slope with others seismic areas like California or Alaska, where we know the critic seismic acceleration, by a comparable situation the sediment of the Ebro slope could be unstable between 200 and 700 m depth if the slope gradient was between 5º and 10º. 4. Discussion 4.1. DISTRIBUTION AND VARIABILITY OF MASS MOVEMENT FEATURES Mass-movement is a common processes in the Ebro slope at recent times, both in submarine canyons and open slope environments. In fact, about 37 % of the Ebro slope is affected by these features, which show variability in their distribution, type, size and morphology. The canyons are mostly located on the central sector. The small-scale mass-movements occur in the form of slides on the upper slope and in the form of massflow deposits on the lower slope in the three sectors. The large-scale slides and massflow deposits extends from the upper to lower slope mainly in the southernmost part of the central sector and southern sector. This variability in distribution, type, scale and morphology seems to be controlled by different factors: sedimentary, physiographic/morphologic and tectonics. We can tentatively consider that the relative higher sediment supply received by the central slope sector (Farran & Maldonado, 1990) plus its oversteeping favoured a relative major occurrence of failures on that sector, where the canyons are bigger and numerous. Those factors also seem to have conditioned the occurrence of small scale mass-flow deposits; they formed from mass movements on the thick regressive prograding deltas. The long travelled distances and their remoulded stage could be explained by the relative higher gradients of the open slope plus their open conditions without the presence of gullies or canyons interrupting their travelling pathway. Likewise, the sedimentary factor has conditioned the location of the small-scale and slide scars on the upper slope; in fact, their occurrence is associated to the formation of regressive deltas and they can be considered as delta front failures. On the other hand, tectonics and morphology have governed the formation and location of the large-scale slides and mass-flow deposits. The earthquake activity related to the emplacement of volcanic edificies (Field & Gardner, 1990) and the lack of canyons favoured the Columbretes, Torreblanca and BIG formation. In the case of the BIG mass flow deposits, its age also point to a sedimentary controlling factor related to a lowstand position of sea-level in that time. 4.2. COMPARISON BETWEEN GEOTECHNICAL AND SEISMIC MODELLINGS The geotechnical modelling proposed by Baraza et al. (1990) could explain certain aspects of the mass-movement features on the Ebro slope. It is a good proxy to start 398 Casas et al. understanding what are the general physical and geotechnical properties of the sediment present in that area and its probable behaviour. In fact, the proposed geotechnical zonation could explain why most of debris flow deposits are concentrated in the lower slope, since there the sediment has a higher plasticity than the sediment present in the upper slope. Figure 2. Sedimentary facies defined in the upper and lower slope. Core logs show lithology and idealised representation of sedimentary structures observed in X-radiographs. Likewise, the geotechnical zonation could help to understand why the large scale slides have their scars on the upper slope; this is because between 200 and 700 m water depth the slope would the more susceptible area to failure triggered by a seismic loading. Submarine Mass Movement on the Ebro Slope 399 But this model is certainly insufficient to explain the variability of settings, types, scales, and geometries of the mass movement features defined on the seismic profiles. The seismic analysis suggests a greater diversity of depositional environments (lower and upper slope, northern-central-and southern sectors, canyon and open slope environments) than the reflected by the geotechnical modelling (upper and lower slope). This fact suggests that the distribution and variability of mass movement features and their probable triggering mechanisms should be studied individually from a geotechnical point of view in order to know local conditions of stability or failure. This would be a good way to know why one region of seafloor remains intact whereas the neighbouring sector fails and why it fails in the way that it does. Besides the above mentioned, recent new data collected from piston cores on the BIG’95 mass flow deposits (Willmot et al, 2001) show differences in the physical property referring to water content with respect to that obtained in the geotechnical modelling. The water content measured in the cores distributed along the BIG'95 shows a general reduction about 43 % respect to the mean value obtained by the geotechnical modelling in the surrounding area. In consequence, if index properties of sediment are conditioned by water content in upper and lower zonation (Baraza, 1989), the behaviour of this part of slope could be significantly different, enhancing the necessity of studying individually the different seismically observed mass-movement features. Another point unresolved by the geotechnical modelling is the behaviour during the failure and post-failure stages of different mass movement features, even the possible re-activation of the failed masses. The two large slides, Columbretes and Torreblanca, are in an equivalent position from a point of view of the geotechnical zonation, but they display a different seismic and morphologic features. The internal structure of Torreblanca slide indicates that sediment is slightly disturbed and that its downslope transport only caused rumpling and folding. The slab slide seems to exist as a geometric entity, whereas at the Columbretes slide a progressive fragmentation seems to occur during the downslope movement. The lack of bedding in the Columbretes slide indicates that deposits have been displaced, distorted and mixed as the slide moved downslope. The variable depth of the failure plane (shallower northeastern) beneath the seafloor and the different stratigraphic levels that it affects, both suggest that failure is not rooted in a single incompetent layer. The geotechnical information available can not explain at present this different behaviour during the failure or post-failure stage for sediments a priori equivalents. 5. Conclusions The seismic analysis has offered indirect observations of the tectono-sedimentary framework where the mass-movement features occur and how we see them being able to define slide plane, internal pattern, scale of failure, slide geometry, run-out distances etc. The geotechnical analysis has offered direct observation about index properties, shear strength and consolidation of the slope sediments. But the obtained geotechnical modelling has been insufficient to explain the variability of failures and depositional environments where they occur. These results suggest that the different failure events should be studied individually in order to know the failure dynamics and their impact on slope instability. Likewise, it is required measurement of geotechnical parameters that 400 Casas et al. are not available at present, such as in-situ geotechnical properties (i.e. shear strength and pore pressures measurements), and a new collection of long cores, representative of all described depositional environments. These data could provide a good knowledge of geotechnical and sedimentary characteristics of the area and a good approach to a future mapping of instability hazard and risk assessment. 6. Acknowledgements This work was founded by the European Commission ANAXIMANDER project (EVK3-2001-00123), and by the “Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología” MARCONI (REN2000-0336-C03) project, MARSIBAL (REN2001-3868-C03) project and ANT1999-1462-E. The support of these people and institutions is gratefully acknowledged. David Casas thanks the Generalitat de Catalunya for the PhD grant (1999FI 00002CSIC PG). 7. References Alonso, B. (1986). El sistema del Abanico profundo del Ebro. Ph.D. Thesis. 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