“…"; Galy et al, 2007;Zavala et al, 2012;Sparkes et al, 2015). Secondly, turbidity currents may form due to externally or autogenically triggered collapse of sediment accumulations, such as at submarine canyon heads that trap littoral sediment transport (e.g., Xu et al, 2002;Paull et al, 2018;Smith et al, 2018), rapidly prograding delta fronts (e.g., Clare et al, 2016;Obelcz et al, 2017) or on open continental slopes (e.g., Nisbet and Piper, 1998;Talling et al, 2014;Soutter et al, 2018). Such failure-generated flows may be highly concentrated, contain a heterogeneous sediment mixture, and have the potential to run-out significant distances, eroding and entraining seafloor deposits from open slopes, or within a canyon or channel along their path (e.g., Piper and Savoye, 1993;Stevenson et al, 2015;Allin et al, 2016;Hunt, 2017;Mountjoy et al, 2018).…”