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GÜRBÜZ, KEMAL (1999) Regional implications of structural and eustatic controls in the evolution of submarine fans: an example from the Miocene Adana Basin, southern Turkey. Geological Magazine, 136 (3) 311-319 doi:10.1017/s0016756899002617

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleRegional implications of structural and eustatic controls in the evolution of submarine fans: an example from the Miocene Adana Basin, southern Turkey
JournalGeological Magazine
AuthorsGÜRBÜZ, KEMALAuthor
Year1999 (May)Volume136
Issue3
PublisherCambridge University Press (CUP)
DOIdoi:10.1017/s0016756899002617Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID258109Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:258109:9
GUID0
Full ReferenceGÜRBÜZ, KEMAL (1999) Regional implications of structural and eustatic controls in the evolution of submarine fans: an example from the Miocene Adana Basin, southern Turkey. Geological Magazine, 136 (3) 311-319 doi:10.1017/s0016756899002617
Plain TextGÜRBÜZ, KEMAL (1999) Regional implications of structural and eustatic controls in the evolution of submarine fans: an example from the Miocene Adana Basin, southern Turkey. Geological Magazine, 136 (3) 311-319 doi:10.1017/s0016756899002617
In(1999, May) Geological Magazine Vol. 136 (3) Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Abstract/NotesDeep-sea fan development is generally thought to be controlled by a combination of
changes in sea level, the shape and size of the basin in which the fans are growing, and the nature of
the source area. The Early Miocene evolution of the eastern Mediterranean involved significant accumulation
of deep-water clastic sediment in which the importance of each of these controlling factors
can be evaluated. The deep-water clastic system located in the Adana Basin has been studied in detail.
Two contemporaneous, small, radial, sand-rich submarine fans (one in the west and one in the east)
exhibiting different scales, fan types and styles of deposition have been recognized within the Cingöz
turbidite sequence of the northern Adana Basin in southern Turkey. Sedimentological studies indicate
that the fans were controlled externally by tectonics and relative eustatic sea-level fall during late
Serravallian time, in combination with the nature of the source area to the north. The internal architectural
stacking patterns and external geometry of the two fan systems were strongly affected by the
interaction of local tectonics and turbidity current pathways, including a major topographic confinement
to the southeast that forced a vertical aggradation of the eastern fan and an east–west elongation
of the western fan. This paper describes a classic example of a well-exposed deep-water clastic system
where (1) tectonically driven sea-floor topography, (2) syn-sedimentary tectonism and (3) eustatic rise
in sea level, are the primary controls on its development.


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