EGU21-15380
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15380
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Morphology of small-scale submarine mass movement events across the northwest United Kingdom

Gareth Carter1, Rhys Cooper1, Joana Gafeira1, John Howe2, and David Long1
Gareth Carter et al.
  • 1British Geological Survey, The Lyell Centre, Research Avenue South, Edinburgh EH14 4AP, UK
  • 2Scottish Association for Marine Science, Scottish Marine Institute, Dunbeg, Oban PA37 1QA, UK

Given the potentially devastating consequences of shallow submarine landslides on infrastructure and human lives, it is imperative that we understand potential slope stability issues within marine coastal regions. In Scottish waters, our lack of knowledge regarding the nature of the seabed within the fjords and coastal inlets is concerning given that these sea lochs have similar morphological features and settings to global examples (e.g. Norway) where recent slope failures have had such highly devastating results. Global examples from similar physiographic settings also demonstrate the temporal aspect of these events, highlighting that they are caused by active modern processes and therefore represent contemporary geohazards. In addition, previous studies have highlighted that there tends to be a scale bias towards the mapping and reporting of large-scale events, and there is a requirement for studies that focus on small-scale (≤1 km3) mass movements which can still have damaging consequences on seafloor and coastal (both nearshore and onshore) infrastructure.

In this study, a review of multibeam echo sounder (MBES) survey datasets from five locations around the United Kingdom northwest coast has led to the identification of a total of 14 separate submarine mass movement scars and deposits within the fjords (sea lochs) and coastal inlets of mainland Scotland, and the channels between the islands of the Inner Hebrides. In these areas, Quaternary sediment deposition was dominated by glacial and glaciomarine processes. Analysis of the morphometric parameters of each submarine mass movement has revealed that they fall into four distinct groups of subaqueous landslides; Singular Slumps, Singular Translational, Multiple Single-Type, and Complex (translational & rotational) failures. The Singular Slump Group includes discrete, individual subaqueous slumps that exhibit no evidence of modification through the merging of several scars. The Singular Translational Group comprise a single slide that displays characteristics associated with a single translational (planar) failure with no merging of multiple events. The Multiple Single-Type Group incorporates scars and deposits that displayed morphometric features consistent with the amalgamation of several failure events of the same type (e.g. debris flows or slumps). Finally, the Complex (translational & rotational) Group comprises landslides that exhibited complex styles of failures, including both translational and rotational mechanisms controlling the same slide. The submarine mass movements that comprise this dataset are then discussed in relation to global fjordic and glaciomarine nearshore settings, and slope failure trigger mechanisms associated with these environments are described with tentative links to individual submarine landslides from the database, where appropriate. It is acknowledged that additional MBES data are needed not only to expand this database but also to create a more statistically robust study. However, this initial study provides the basis for a much wider investigation of submarine mass movements and correlations between their morphometric parameters.

How to cite: Carter, G., Cooper, R., Gafeira, J., Howe, J., and Long, D.: Morphology of small-scale submarine mass movement events across the northwest United Kingdom, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15380, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15380, 2021.

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