TY - JOUR
T1 - Last millennium sedimentation in the Gulf of Cariaco (NE Venezuela)
T2 - Evidence for morphological changes of gulf entrance and possible relations with large earthquakes
AU - Aguilar, Iliana
AU - Beck, Christian
AU - Audemard, Franck
AU - Develle, Anne Lise
AU - Boussafir, Mohammed
AU - Campos, Corina
AU - Crouzet, Christian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Académie des sciences.
PY - 2016/1/1
Y1 - 2016/1/1
N2 - The Cariaco Basin and the Gulf of Cariaco in Venezuela are two major basins along the seismogenic El Pilar right lateral fault, among which the Cariaco Basin is a pull-apart. Both basins are sites of anoxia and organic-rich deposits. To examine whether the sediments in the Gulf of Cariaco have recorded traces of historical or prehistorical earthquakes, we extracted and analyzed twelve 1 m-long gravity cores, sampling the last millennium sedimentation. We focused on analyzing the sediment sources with different techniques (particle size analysis, XRF, loss on ignition tests, magnetic properties, Rock-Eval pyrolysis, 14C dating). The results confirm that major upwelling occurs at the western gulf entrance and makes deep water flowing from the Cariaco Basin into the Gulf of Cariaco. These flows carry an organic-rich suspended load. Furthermore, we found evidence of a particular, widespread fine-grained siliciclastic deposit (named SiCL3) within the gulf, whose age suggests that it likely formed during the large 1853 AD earthquake that stroke the Cumaná city. We suggest that the earthquake-induced large submarine landslides that modified the topography of the gulf's entrance, which in turn promoted upwelling and open marine water flows from the Cariaco Basin. The layer SiCL3 would be the sediment load remobilized during this chain of events.
AB - The Cariaco Basin and the Gulf of Cariaco in Venezuela are two major basins along the seismogenic El Pilar right lateral fault, among which the Cariaco Basin is a pull-apart. Both basins are sites of anoxia and organic-rich deposits. To examine whether the sediments in the Gulf of Cariaco have recorded traces of historical or prehistorical earthquakes, we extracted and analyzed twelve 1 m-long gravity cores, sampling the last millennium sedimentation. We focused on analyzing the sediment sources with different techniques (particle size analysis, XRF, loss on ignition tests, magnetic properties, Rock-Eval pyrolysis, 14C dating). The results confirm that major upwelling occurs at the western gulf entrance and makes deep water flowing from the Cariaco Basin into the Gulf of Cariaco. These flows carry an organic-rich suspended load. Furthermore, we found evidence of a particular, widespread fine-grained siliciclastic deposit (named SiCL3) within the gulf, whose age suggests that it likely formed during the large 1853 AD earthquake that stroke the Cumaná city. We suggest that the earthquake-induced large submarine landslides that modified the topography of the gulf's entrance, which in turn promoted upwelling and open marine water flows from the Cariaco Basin. The layer SiCL3 would be the sediment load remobilized during this chain of events.
KW - Cariaco
KW - El Pilar fault
KW - Geochemistry
KW - Large earthquakes
KW - Sedimentation
KW - Submarine landslides
KW - Submarine paleoseismology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84958061907&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.crte.2015.10.001
DO - 10.1016/j.crte.2015.10.001
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:84958061907
SN - 1631-0713
VL - 348
SP - 70
EP - 79
JO - Comptes Rendus - Geoscience
JF - Comptes Rendus - Geoscience
IS - 1
ER -