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Geological Society, London, Special Publications; 1984; v. 15; p. 209-222;
DOI: 10.1144/GSL.SP.1984.015.01.14
© 1984 Geological Society of London

Carbonate Turbidites and Associated Facies

Late Quaternary calcareous clayey-silty muds in the Obock Trough (Gulf of Aden): hemipelagites or fine-grained turbidites?

J.-C. Faugères, M. Cremer, E. Gonthier, M. Noel & J. Poutiers

Département Géologie et Océanographie, Université Bordeaux I, Laboratoire Associé CNRS no 197, Avenue des Facultés, 33405 Talence Cedex France

Three cores have allowed us to survey Holocene deposits in a trough of the Gulf of Aden ridge. Within this particular environment (steep slopes, tectonic and volcanic activity) sediments are fine-grained, apparently homogeneous calcareous muds, rich in clay and planktonic microfossils: these features suggest that they are hemipelagic deposits. However, high sedimentation rates (20 to 50 cm/1000 yrs), lateral variation, and the occurrence of dynamic sedimentary structures (visible on X-radiographs and in thin sections), suggest that they have been emplaced mainly by gravity currents. These reworked hemipelagic materials are deposited on the shelf edge and on the trough slopes. This is confirmed by the sequential arrangement of sedimentary characteristics, as shown by analysis of microstructures, microfacies, carbonates, clay minerals, grain-size and other components.

Two types of sequences have been observed; the first we call the ‘type sequence’. This commonly overlies an erosional surface and comprises three divisions from bottom to the top: Division I (equivalent to Piper’s E1 division); mud with 8–10% sand fraction, rich in biogenic tests which occur as well-sorted horizontal laminae.

Division II (equivalent to Piper’s E2 and E3 divisions); mud with low sand fraction (1%), very poor in biogenic material, no lamination, but horizontal orientation of silt-sized bioclasts.

Division III (equivalent to Piper’s E2 and E3 divisions); mud with low sand fraction (1%), very poor in biogenic material, no lamination, but horizontal orientation of silt-sized bioclasts.

Division III (equivalent to Piper’s F division); mud with low sandy fraction, poorly-sorted biogenic material, no dynamic sedimentary structures.

The second type of sequence is less common and comprises two divisions:

Division I’a; very thin layer (millimetric), rich in terrigenous silt, which scours underlying sediment and shows horizontal, oblique and cross lamination.

Division I’b; mud with low biogenic sand content, showing horizontal more or less clear and irregularly-distributed lamination.

These two sequences correspond to divisions E and F defined by Bouma (1962) and Piper (1978) in terrigenous turbidite sequences. The ‘type sequence’ is comparable to turbiditic sequences described in pelagic or hemipelagic material, deposited in similar morpho-tectonic environments (e.g. the eastern Mediterranean Sea or Mid Atlantic Ridge fracture zone).