The Storegga Slide Complex; Repeated Large Scale Sliding in Response to Climatic Cyclicity

  • Bryn P
  • Solheim A
  • Berg K
  • et al.
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Abstract

The Holocene Storegga Slide is the last of a series of slides occurring in the same area during the last 500ky. The objectives of the present paper are to present the current understanding of the trigger mechanisms and development of the Storegga Slide, and to show the link between the sliding and Pleistocene climatic fluctuations in the area. Instability is created by the rapid loading of fine-grained hemipelagic deposits and oozes by rapid glacial deposition during peak glaciations. Postglacial earthquake activity was the most likely trigger. Although slide development is complicated and involves a number of slide mechanisms and processes, the overall development is retrogressive, starting at the mid- to lower slope. Sliding stops when the headwall reaches the flat lying, overconsolidated glacial deposits of the shelf.

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Bryn, P., Solheim, A., Berg, K., Lien, R., Forsberg, C. F., Haflidason, H., … Rise, L. (2003). The Storegga Slide Complex; Repeated Large Scale Sliding in Response to Climatic Cyclicity (pp. 215–222). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-010-0093-2_24

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