Combellas Bigott, Ricardo I.1,
Michael Angel2, Neil Delfino3, Dan Orange4,
Kent Rinehart3, Nigel Tootill5 (1) Chevron, Houston, TX
(2) William Lettis & Associates, N/A, (3) Chevron, N/A, (4) AOA Geophysics,
Inc, N/A, (5) Intec Engineering, N/A,
A unique integrated study with new
surface and subsurface data was performed to understand the slope processes and
evolution of the first 80 Kms of the
A comprehensive integration of high
resolution surface and subsurface data allowed characterized the stratigraphy
and geohazards currently active in the Canyon. A striking asymmetric filling of
the north and south canyon rim illustrates a complex-multistory Canyon fill. A
basal Upper Miocene-Pliocene unconformity represents the origin of the Canyon
on top of NW-SE truncated-deep-seated normal faults. Even though part of the
canyon fill was formed by catastrophic failure and turbidity events, there are
many regions of the canyon fill that display a long-period of quite deposition
derived from raining terrigeneous sediments and lateral debris flows.
The current geomorphology of the canyon
changes dramatically from an updip dendritic tributary canyon walls to a
cauliflower shape canyon walls downdip. Most tributary canyons are relict
features dominated by lowstand longshore-drift current deposits and do not
represent geohazards for facilities. Downdip, canyon walls are subject to two
different types of sea-floor erosion: Head-ward migrating erosion, and top-down
erosion from sidewall deposits. Many of the terraces are relict, paleo-sidewall
deposits with absent of basal turbidity overflows, which represent potential
safe locations for facilities.
AAPG Search and Discover Article #90063©2007 AAPG Annual Convention, Long Beach, California