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Longest sediment flows yet measured show how major rivers connect efficiently to deep sea.

Peter J TallingMegan L BakerEdward PopeSean C RuffellRicardo Silva JacintoMaarten S HeijnenSophie HageStephen M SimmonsMartin HasenhündlCatharina J HeeremaClaire McGheeRonan ApprioualAnthony FerrantMatthieu J B CartignyDaniel R ParsonsMichael A ClareRaphael M TshimangaMark A TriggCosta A CulaRui FariaArnaud GaillotGode BolaDec WallanceAllan GriffithsRobert NunnyMorelia UrlaubChristine PeirceRichard BurnettJeffrey NeashamRobert J Hilton
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Here we show how major rivers can efficiently connect to the deep-sea, by analysing the longest runout sediment flows (of any type) yet measured in action on Earth. These seafloor turbidity currents originated from the Congo River-mouth, with one flow travelling >1,130 km whilst accelerating from 5.2 to 8.0 m/s. In one year, these turbidity currents eroded 1,338-2,675 [>535-1,070] Mt of sediment from one submarine canyon, equivalent to 19-37 [>7-15] % of annual suspended sediment flux from present-day rivers. It was known earthquakes trigger canyon-flushing flows. We show river-floods also generate canyon-flushing flows, primed by rapid sediment-accumulation at the river-mouth, and sometimes triggered by spring tides weeks to months post-flood. It is demonstrated that strongly erosional turbidity currents self-accelerate, thereby travelling much further, validating a long-proposed theory. These observations explain highly-efficient organic carbon transfer, and have important implications for hazards to seabed cables, or deep-sea impacts of terrestrial climate change.
Keyphrases
  • heavy metals
  • highly efficient
  • polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
  • climate change
  • organic matter
  • risk assessment
  • water quality
  • sensitive detection