During the MVSEIS-08 cruise of 2008, ten new mud volcanoes (MVs) were discovered on the offshore Moroccan continental margin (Gulf of Cádiz) at water depths between 750 and 1,600 m, using multibeam bathymetry, backscatter imagery, high-resolution seismic and gravity core data. Mud breccias were recovered in all cases, attesting to the nature of extrusion of these cones. The mud volcanoes are located in two fields: the MVSEIS, Moundforce, Pixie, Las Negras, Madrid, Guadix, Almanzor and El Cid MVs in the western Moroccan field, where mud volcanoes have long been suspected but to date not identified, and the Boabdil and Al Gacel MVs in the middle Moroccan field. Three main morphologies were observed: asymmetric, sub-circular and flat-topped cone-shaped types, this being the first report of asymmetric morphologies in the Gulf of Cádiz. Based on morpho-structural analysis, the features are interpreted to result from (1) repeated constructive (expulsion of fluid mud mixtures) and destructive (gravity-induced collapse and submarine landsliding) episodes and (2) interaction with bottom currents.
A geomorphological analysis of the submarine landslides geographical information system catalogue of the Geological Survey of Spain has revealed three main groups of submarine landslides associated with (1) deep-ocean seamount ridges (extinct spreading centres), (2) volcanic islands and (3) continental margins. These three groups have statistically significant morphometric differences, as determined from analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Tukey's HSD Tests, in total length (runout), total area, maximum deposit width and bathymetric depth. Volcanic island-related slope failures affect larger areas of the seafloor and their headwall escarpments often extend above sea-level. Slope failures associated with seamount ridges are the deepest, between 3500 and 5500 m, and display relatively high width-to-length ratios. Finally, landslides on continental margins show two sub-groups. Landslides on tectonically controlled margins have smaller runouts and total area and larger average slope gradients than margins where tectonic controls are limited. These results demonstrate that submarine landslide morphology is strongly controlled by the geological-tectonic setting.
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