“…Only a few studies investigate the influence of a deforming seafloor on turbiditic sedimentation at large spatial (10 -100 km in length) and time scales (0.5 -10 My) (Cronin, 1995;Haughton, 2001;Normark, 1985;Sinclair & Tomasso, 2002). However, at basin-scale, extensive deep-water petroleum exploration highlights the effect of an irregular seafloor topography on depositional processes during a short period ( £ 100 ky scale) of deposition (Beaubouef & Friedmann, 2000;Nelson, Karabanov, Coleman, & Escutia, 1999;Pirmez, Beaubouef, Friedmann, & Mohrig, 2000;Prather, 2000;Prather, Booth, Steffens, & Craig, 1998;Weimer et al, 1998). This aspect remains fundamental for a better understanding of architectures and facies variations within turbidity currents deposits because seafloor deformation will act on gravitydriven currents through two parameters: change in slope gradient and in flow constriction (Kneller, 1995).…”