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Título
The Guadiaro-Baños contourite drifts (SW Mediterranean). A geotechnical approach to stability analysis
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Contourite drift
Submarine landslide
Alboran Sea
Sedimentology
In-situ geotechnical tests (CPTu)
Factor of safety (FoS)
Clasificación UNESCO
2506 Geología
Fecha de publicación
2021
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Yenes, M., Casas, D., Nespereira, J., López-González, N., Casalbore, D., Monterrubio, S., Alonso, B., Ercilla, G., Juan, C., Bárcenas, P., Palomino, D., Mata, P., Martínez-Díaz, P., Pérez, N., Vázquez, J. T., Estrada, F., Azpiroz-Zabala, M., & Teixeira, M. (2021). The Guadiaro-Baños contourite drifts (SW Mediterranean). A geotechnical approach to stability analysis. Marine Geology, 437, 106505. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2021.106505
Resumen
[EN] Two Quaternary plastered contourite drifts, with terraced and low-mounded morphologies, make up the continental slope and base-of-slope in the northwestern Alboran Sea, respectively, between the Guadiaro and Banos ˜
turbidite systems, close to the Strait of Gibraltar.
Considering their significant lateral extent, the link between the contourite drift deposits and landslides may
be particularly important for hazard assessment. The physical properties, composition and geometry of contourite drifts have been proposed as key factors in slope stability, although this relationship still needs to be
better constrained. In this work, new in-situ geotechnical data (cone penetration tests; CPTu) has been combined
with morphostratigraphic, sedimentological, and (laboratory) geotechnical properties to determine the stability
of the Guadiaro-Banos ˜ drifts.
For the depositional domains of both drifts, the resulting sedimentary and geotechnical model describes lowplasticity granular and silty sands on the erosive terraced domain that evolve seawards to silty and silty-clay
deposits with a higher plasticity and uniform geomechanical properties. For the shallower coarse-grained contourite sediments, the cohesion (c’) and internal friction angle (ϕ’) values are 0–9 kPa and 46–30◦, respectively,
whereas for the distal fine contourites the undrained shear strength gradient (∇Su) is 2 kPa/m. These properties
allow us to establish high factors of safety for all the scenarios considered, including seismic loading. Slope
failure may be triggered in the unlikely event that there is seismic acceleration of PGA > 0.19, although no
potential glide planes have been observed within the first 20 m below the seafloor.
This suggests that the contourite drifts studied tend to resist failure better than others with similar sedimentary
characteristics. The interplay of several processes is proposed to explain the enhanced undrained shear strength:
1) the geometry of the drifts, defined by an upper contouritic terrace and lower low-mounded shapes; 2)
recurrent low-intensity earthquakes with insufficient energy to trigger landslides, favouring increased strength
due to dynamic compaction; and 3) cyclic loading induced by solitons/internal waves acting on the sediment.
URI
ISSN
0025-3227
DOI
10.1016/j.margeo.2021.106505
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Patrocinador
Publicación en abierto financiada por la Universidad de Salamanca como participante en el Acuerdo Transformativo CRUE-CSIC con Elsevier, 2021-2024













