Explaining the Storegga Slide [An article from: Marine and Petroleum Geology]
Book Details
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000RR3RL0
ISBN-13978B000RR3RL3
AvailabilityAvailable for download now
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
This digital document is a journal article from Marine and Petroleum Geology, published by Elsevier in 2005. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description:
The Storegga Slide occurred 8200 years ago and was the last megaslide in this region where similar slides have occurred with intervals of approximately 100ky since the onset of continental shelf glaciations at 0.5Ma. A geological model for the Plio-Pleistocene of the area explains the large scale sliding as a response to climatic variability, and the seismic stratigraphy indicates that sliding occurs at the end of a glaciation or soon after the deglaciation. The slides are in general translational with the failure planes related to strain softening behaviour of marine clay layers. The destabilisation prior to the slide is related to rapid loading from glacial deposits with generation of excess pore pressure and reduction of the effective shear strength in the underlying clays. Basin modelling has shown that excess pore pressure generated in the North Sea Fan area is transferred to the Storegga area with reduction of the slope stability in the old escarpments in distal parts of the Storegga Slide. The slide was most likely triggered by a strong earthquake in an area 150km downslope from the Ormen Lange gas field and developed as a retrogressive slide. The unstable sediments in the area disappeared with the slide 8200 years ago. A new ice age with infilling of glacial sediments on top of marine clays in the slide scar would be needed to create a new unstable situation at Ormen Lange.
Description:
The Storegga Slide occurred 8200 years ago and was the last megaslide in this region where similar slides have occurred with intervals of approximately 100ky since the onset of continental shelf glaciations at 0.5Ma. A geological model for the Plio-Pleistocene of the area explains the large scale sliding as a response to climatic variability, and the seismic stratigraphy indicates that sliding occurs at the end of a glaciation or soon after the deglaciation. The slides are in general translational with the failure planes related to strain softening behaviour of marine clay layers. The destabilisation prior to the slide is related to rapid loading from glacial deposits with generation of excess pore pressure and reduction of the effective shear strength in the underlying clays. Basin modelling has shown that excess pore pressure generated in the North Sea Fan area is transferred to the Storegga area with reduction of the slope stability in the old escarpments in distal parts of the Storegga Slide. The slide was most likely triggered by a strong earthquake in an area 150km downslope from the Ormen Lange gas field and developed as a retrogressive slide. The unstable sediments in the area disappeared with the slide 8200 years ago. A new ice age with infilling of glacial sediments on top of marine clays in the slide scar would be needed to create a new unstable situation at Ormen Lange.
