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1985
The Eocene Hecho Group submarine-fan and basin-plain turbidites fill an elongate basin in the south-central Pyrenees that was tectonically active during deposition. The total volume of these sediments is about 21,000 to 26,000 km3. The bulk of the sand by-passed the fan-channel zone and was deposited in the lobe and fan-fringe environments.
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The Eocene Hecho Group submarine-fan and basin-plain turbidites fill an elongate basin in the south-central Pyrenees that was tectonically active during deposition. The total volume of these sediments is about 21,000 to 26,000 km3. The bulk of the sand by-passed the fan-channel zone and was deposited in the lobe and fan-fringe environments.
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Blanca Turbidite System, California
1985Blanca fan is a submarine fan composed of Miocene volcaniclastic strata. Parts of the fan system are exposed on Santa Cruz and Santa Rosa Islands, and possibly correlative strata crop out on San Miguel and Santa Catalina Islands.
Hugh McLean, D. G. Howell
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Kongsfjord Turbidite System, Norway
1985The late Precambrian Kongsfjord Formation submarine fan is as much as 3200-m thick and contains inner, middle, outer, and transitional fan environments such as a fan lateral margin. It forms the oldest exposed part of a fan-slope-delta system believed to be comparable in size with modern medium-sized fans and deposited along either a passive “Atlantic ...
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Fine-Grained Turbidite Systems
2000Abstract This Memoir covers one of the most important and active exploration reservoirs being pursued by geoscientists worldwide: fine-grained turbidite systems. 28 chapters show the results of an intense research effort in the 1990s that resulted from the discovery of large hydrocarbon accumulations in fine-grained turbidite systems in ...
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Comments and Reply on ‘Eustatic control of turbidites and winnowed turbidites’
Geology, 1983G. Shanmugam, R. J. Moiola
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1961
Abstract The rapid accumulation of data, mainly from field observations and oceanographic research in the past few years, has forced the conclusion that turbidites are not freaks of nature but are very commonplace, especially in environments of deep-water sedimentation. Billions of barrels of oil have been produced from turbidites in the
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Abstract The rapid accumulation of data, mainly from field observations and oceanographic research in the past few years, has forced the conclusion that turbidites are not freaks of nature but are very commonplace, especially in environments of deep-water sedimentation. Billions of barrels of oil have been produced from turbidites in the
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6th International Congress of the Brazilian Geophysical Society, 1999
Mike Mayall, Ian Stewart
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Mike Mayall, Ian Stewart
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