格雷厄姆滩地区的红珊瑚沉积:对西西里海峡全新世火山活动的制约

GeoResJ Pub Date : 2017-06-01 DOI:10.1016/j.grj.2017.04.003
E. Lodolo , R. Sanfilippo , G. Rajola , S. Canese , F. Andaloro , P. Montagna , A. Rosso , D. Macaluso , I. Di Geronimo , M. Caffau
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引用次数: 12

摘要

格雷厄姆滩是位于西西里岛西南海岸外的一个宽阔而相对较浅的地形。在其他海底建筑中,这个地区拥有短暂的费迪南迪亚岛,它于1831年由一次爆炸性喷发形成——这是该研究区域发生的唯一一次有充分记录的事件——并迅速被侵蚀过程摧毁。在Graham Bank及其附近地区,19世纪下半叶发现了三个红珊瑚矿床,并进行了广泛的商业开发,但发现后很快就枯竭了,因为在地质事件导致大规模死亡后,该地区没有活珊瑚种群存活或重新繁殖。珊瑚沉积物位于泥泞的海底,旁边是一些火山浮雕,主要由死珊瑚组成,夹杂着火山和生物碎屑。在这里,我们描述了这些沉积物,并通过对它们的动物成分、放射性碳测年、远程操作车辆海底观测和地震剖面的古生态分析提出了它们的进化史模型。总的来说,现有的数据表明,这些沉积物主要(甚至部分)是由于火山活动将活的(或死的)珊瑚从它们生活的火山陡峭侧翼上移走的结果。这些建筑物脆弱的火山碎屑墙的周期性崩塌和山体滑坡可能是由反复的海底喷发引发的,可能与小地震有关。
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The red coral deposits of the Graham Bank area: Constraints on the Holocene volcanic activity of the Sicilian Channel

The Graham Bank is a broad and relatively shallow relief located off the SW coast of Sicily. This area hosts, among other submarine edifices, the ephemeral Ferdinandea Island, created in 1831 by an explosive eruption - the only well-documented event occurred in the study area - and rapidly dismantled by erosional processes. In the Graham Bank and its vicinity, three red coral deposits have been discovered and extensively exploited commercially during the last part of the 19th century, and were quickly depleted after discovery, since no living coral populations survived or repopulated the area after geological events that caused the massive die off. The coral deposits lay on a muddy sea-floor alongside some volcanic reliefs, and consisted of mostly dead corals, intermingled with volcanic and biogenic debris. Here, we describe these deposits and propose a model for their evolutionary history through palaeoecological analyses of their faunistic content, radiocarbon dating, Remotely Operated Vehicle sea-floor observations, and seismic profiles. Overall presented data suggest that these deposits have accumulated primarily (or even partially) as a consequence of volcanic activity dislodging living (or dead) corals from the steep flanks of volcanoes on which they lived. Periodic collapses of the friable pyroclastic walls of these edifices and landslides may have been triggered by repeated submarine eruptions, possibly associated with small earthquakes.

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