“…As part of a wider study of deep-sea sedimentary fabric, we measured the anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) of surficial sediments from the HEBBLE (High Energy Benthic Boundary Layer Experiment) area on the Nova Scotian continental rise. The alignment of magnetic grains, which gives rise to AMS is thought to be representative of the alignment of other grains in the sample (Hamilton and Rees, 1970), and the fabric of these grains has been used to infer the direction of paleocurrents and the nature of sedimentation conditions in various regions of the world ocean (Rees et al, 1968;Ledbetter, 1977, 1979;Ellwood, 1979Ellwood, , 1980aLedbetter and Ellwood, 1980;Auffret et al, 1981;Rees et al, 1982;Bullfinch et al, 1982;Shor et al, 1984). We measured magnetic fabric of sediments from the HEBBLE area, a well-surveyed, well-studied, and heavily instrumented region of the Nova Scotian rise, to attempt to relate the fabric of the surficial sediments to modern depositional conditions.…”