Emplacement of submarine landslides, or mass transport deposits, can radically reshape the physiography of continental margins, and strongly influence subsequent sedimentary processes and dispersal patterns. The irregular relief they generate creates obstacles that force reorganisation of sediment transport systems. Subsurface and seabed examples show that channels can incise directly into submarine landslides. Here, we use high-resolution sedimentological analysis, geological mapping and photogrammetric modelling to document the evolution of two adjacent, and partially contemporaneous, sandstone-rich submarine channel-fills (NSB and SSB) that incised deeply (>75 m) with steep lateral margins (up to 70°) into a 200 m thick debrite. The stepped erosion surface mantled by clasts, ranging from gravels to cobbles, points to a period of downcutting and sediment bypass. A change to aggradation is marked by laterally-migrating sandstone-rich channel bodies that is coincident with prominent steps in the large-scale erosion surface. Two types of depositional terrace are documented on these steps: one overlying an entrenchment surface, and another located in a bend cut-off. Above a younger erosion surface, mapped in both NSB and SSB, is an abrupt change to partially-confined tabular sandstones with graded caps, interpreted as confined lobes. The lobes are characterised by a lack of compensational stacking and increasingly thick hybrid bed deposits, suggesting progradation of a lobe complex confined by the main erosion surface. The incision of adjacent and partially coeval channels into a thick submarine landslide, and sand-rich infill including development of partially confined lobes, reflects the complicated relationships between evolving relief and changes in sediment gravity flow character, which can only be investigated at outcrop. The absence of channel-fills in bounding strata, and the abrupt and temporary presence of coarse sediment infilling the channels, indicates that the submarine landslide emplacement reshaped sediment transport systems, and established conditions that effectively separated sand- from mud-dominated deposits.
Scours, and scour fields, are common features on the modern seafloor of deep-marine systems, particularly downstream of submarine channels, and in channel-lobe-transitions-zones. High-resolution images of the seafloor have improved the documentation of the large scale, coalescence, and distribution of these scours in deep-marine systems. However, their scale and high aspect ratio mean they can be challenging to identify in outcrop. Here, we document a large-scale, composite erosion surface from the exhumed deep-marine stratigraphy of Unit 5 from the Permian Karoo Basin succession in South Africa, which is interpreted to be present at the end of a submarine channel.This study utilizes 24 sedimentary logs, 2 cored boreholes, and extensive palaeocurrent and thickness data across a 126 km2 study area. Sedimentary facies analysis, thickness variations and correlation panels allowed identification of a lower heterolithic-dominated part (up to 70 m thick) and an upper sandstone-dominated part (10-40 m thick) separated by an extensive erosion surface. The lower part comprises heterolithics with abundant current and sinusoidal ripples, which due to palaeocurrents, thickness trends and adjacent depositional environments is interpreted as the aggradational lobe complex fringes. The base of the upper part comprises 2-3 medium-bedded sandstone beds interpreted as precursor lobes cut by a 3-4 km wide, 1-2 km long, and up to 28 m deep, high aspect ratio (1:100) composite scour surface. The abrupt change from heterolithics to thick-bedded sandstones marks the establishment of a new sediment delivery system, which may have been triggered by an updip channel avulsion. The composite scour and subsequent sandstone fill support a change from erosion- and bypass-dominated flows to depositional flows, which might reflect increasingly sand-rich flows as a new sediment route matured. This study provides a unique outcrop example with 3D stratigraphic control of the record of a new sediment conduit, and development and fill of a large-scale composite scour surface at the channel mouth, providing a rare insight into how scours imaged on seafloor data can be preserved in the rock record.
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