Gemma Ercilla , Jesús Galindo-Zaldívar , Carmen Juan , Ferran Estrada , Jorge Iglesias , Javier Valencia , Víctor Tendero-Salmerón , Elia d'Acremont , María del Carmen Fernández-Puga , Lourdes González-Castillo , Asier Madarieta-Txurruka , Desiree Palomino , Manuel Teixeira , Juan Tomás Vázquez
{"title":"Geomorphology of the northern and southern continental margins of the Iberian Peninsula: Quaternary interplay of tectonics and sedimentation","authors":"Gemma Ercilla , Jesús Galindo-Zaldívar , Carmen Juan , Ferran Estrada , Jorge Iglesias , Javier Valencia , Víctor Tendero-Salmerón , Elia d'Acremont , María del Carmen Fernández-Puga , Lourdes González-Castillo , Asier Madarieta-Txurruka , Desiree Palomino , Manuel Teixeira , Juan Tomás Vázquez","doi":"10.1016/j.margeo.2024.107467","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>Through a comparison of the physiography and Quaternary deposits and features of three tectonically deformed Iberian continental margins by the NW–SE convergent Eurasia-Iberian-Africa plates, we attempt to address the influence of the interplay of tectonics and sedimentation on their geomorphology. The areas include the currently active southern Iberian Alboran and Gulf of Vera margins in the SW Mediterranean and the inactive northern Iberian Cantabrian margin in the Atlantic. The margin study comprises two major physiographic compartments, the continental shelf and the distal margin, where the latter also includes the adjacent bathyal water depths. Similarities and differences are highlighted in the tectonic influences and their signatures in the sedimentary geomorphology during the Quaternary. On the continental shelf, the active or inactive onshore uplift appears to have conditioned the seafloor gradients and the preservation of the Quaternary deposits, which subsequently influenced their width. In the distal continental margin, offshore regional structural features (whether active or inactive) govern the complex and oversteepened topography, overall geometry of the sea basin, along-margin intraslope basins and regional tectonic tilting, influencing all the downslope and alongslope sedimentary processes. Thus, Quaternary tectonic processes and/or inherited morphotectonic parameters have influenced the geomorphology of shelf regressive deposits, canyons, gullies, fans, mass movement deposits, and contourites. Two types of tectonic margins based on sedimentary geomorphology are characterised: dismantled (Gulf of Vera and Cantabrian margins) and constructional (Iberian Alboran margin). This study has relevance far beyond the Iberian regional scale because it provides insights into the tectonic signatures of sedimentary geomorphology. The categorised margin types may serve as analogues for contemporary marine sedimentary basins where tectonics plays a prominent role in sediment transport, deposition, erosion, and remobilisation via their influence on both active and inactive topography.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":18229,"journal":{"name":"Marine Geology","volume":"480 ","pages":"Article 107467"},"PeriodicalIF":2.6000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Marine Geology","FirstCategoryId":"89","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0025322724002512","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"地球科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Through a comparison of the physiography and Quaternary deposits and features of three tectonically deformed Iberian continental margins by the NW–SE convergent Eurasia-Iberian-Africa plates, we attempt to address the influence of the interplay of tectonics and sedimentation on their geomorphology. The areas include the currently active southern Iberian Alboran and Gulf of Vera margins in the SW Mediterranean and the inactive northern Iberian Cantabrian margin in the Atlantic. The margin study comprises two major physiographic compartments, the continental shelf and the distal margin, where the latter also includes the adjacent bathyal water depths. Similarities and differences are highlighted in the tectonic influences and their signatures in the sedimentary geomorphology during the Quaternary. On the continental shelf, the active or inactive onshore uplift appears to have conditioned the seafloor gradients and the preservation of the Quaternary deposits, which subsequently influenced their width. In the distal continental margin, offshore regional structural features (whether active or inactive) govern the complex and oversteepened topography, overall geometry of the sea basin, along-margin intraslope basins and regional tectonic tilting, influencing all the downslope and alongslope sedimentary processes. Thus, Quaternary tectonic processes and/or inherited morphotectonic parameters have influenced the geomorphology of shelf regressive deposits, canyons, gullies, fans, mass movement deposits, and contourites. Two types of tectonic margins based on sedimentary geomorphology are characterised: dismantled (Gulf of Vera and Cantabrian margins) and constructional (Iberian Alboran margin). This study has relevance far beyond the Iberian regional scale because it provides insights into the tectonic signatures of sedimentary geomorphology. The categorised margin types may serve as analogues for contemporary marine sedimentary basins where tectonics plays a prominent role in sediment transport, deposition, erosion, and remobilisation via their influence on both active and inactive topography.
期刊介绍:
Marine Geology is the premier international journal on marine geological processes in the broadest sense. We seek papers that are comprehensive, interdisciplinary and synthetic that will be lasting contributions to the field. Although most papers are based on regional studies, they must demonstrate new findings of international significance. We accept papers on subjects as diverse as seafloor hydrothermal systems, beach dynamics, early diagenesis, microbiological studies in sediments, palaeoclimate studies and geophysical studies of the seabed. We encourage papers that address emerging new fields, for example the influence of anthropogenic processes on coastal/marine geology and coastal/marine geoarchaeology. We insist that the papers are concerned with the marine realm and that they deal with geology: with rocks, sediments, and physical and chemical processes affecting them. Papers should address scientific hypotheses: highly descriptive data compilations or papers that deal only with marine management and risk assessment should be submitted to other journals. Papers on laboratory or modelling studies must demonstrate direct relevance to marine processes or deposits. The primary criteria for acceptance of papers is that the science is of high quality, novel, significant, and of broad international interest.