This study documents the character and occurrence of hybrid event beds deposited across a range of deep-water sub-environments in the Cretaceous-Palaeocene Gottero system, north-west Italy. Detailed fieldwork (>5200 m of sedimentary logs) has shown that hybrid event beds are most abundant in the distal confined basin plain domain (>31% of total thickness). In more proximal sectors, HEBs occur within outer-fan and mid-fan lobes (up to 15% of total thickness), whereas they are not observed in the inner-fan channelised area. Six hybrid event bed types (HEB-1 to HEB-6) were differentiated mainly on basis of the texture of their muddier and chaotic central division (H3). The confined basin plain sector is dominated by thick (max 9.57 m; average 2.15 m) and tabular hybrid event beds (HEB-1 to HEB-4). Their H3 division can include very large substrate slabs, evidence of extensive auto-injection and clast break-up, and abundant mudstone clasts set in a sandy matrix (dispersed clay ca 20%). These beds are thought to have been generated by highly This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.energetic flows capable of delaminating the sea-floor locally, and carrying large rip-up clasts for relatively short distances before arresting. The unconfined lobes of the mid-fan sector are dominated by thinner (average 0.38 m) hybrid event beds . Their H3 divisions are characterised by floating mudstone clasts and clay-enriched matrices (dispersed clay >25%) with hydraulically-fractionated components (mica, organic matter and clay flocs). These hybrid event beds are thought to have been deposited by less energetic flows that underwent early turbulence damping following incorporation of mud at proximal locations and by segregation during transport. Although there is a tendency to look to external factors to account for hybrid event bed development, systems like the Gottero imply that intrabasinal factors can also be important; specifically the type of substrate available (muddy or sandy) and where and how erosion is achieved across the system producing specific hybrid event bed expressions and facies tracts.
(A) INTRODUCTIONBed character and bed stack architecture are two key elements controlling the heterogeneity of deep-water turbidite systems. The former represents the depositional record of sediment gravity flows at a given location with the vertical sequence of grain-size, textures and sedimentary structures recording flow evolution in time and space (Bouma, 1962; Lowe, 1982; Mutti, 1992; Kneller, 1995; Kneller & McCaffrey, 2003). The latter is set by the longer term response of the system to variations in flow volume and concentration over many events modulated by the inherited seafloor topography (Prélat et al., 2010; Brunt et al., 2013b; Marini et al., 2015a). Both define the character and distribution of sedimentary sub-environments in deep-water systems.A wide range of sediment gravity flow deposits have been recognised in turbidite systems; they include the well-known Bouma-type graded sandstones an...