Deep Marine Systems
Processes, Deposits, Environments, Tectonics and Sedimentation
Wiley Works

1. Edition November 2015
672 Pages, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Short Description
Long held as the leading text in marine sedimentology, this updated edition of Deep-Water Systems is now completely rewritten to reflect the significant advances in our understanding of the processes involved in deep marine environments. This text for advanced undergraduate or graduate students, as well as professional and research sedimentologists, explores: deep ocean basins; sediments; paleontology and ichnofacies; slope aprons and slope basins; contrite drifts; abyssal plains and other ocean-basin-floor sheet systems; submarine fans; evolving and mature extensional systems; active convergent margins; oblique-slip plate margins; and offshore and inland systems.
Deep-water (below wave base) processes, although generally hidden from view, shape the sedimentary record of more than 65% of the Earth's surface, including large parts of ancient mountain belts. This book aims to inform advanced-level undergraduate and postgraduate students, and professional Earth scientists with interests in physical oceanography and hydrocarbon exploration and production, about many of the important physical aspects of deep-water (mainly deep-marine) systems. The authors consider transport and deposition in the deep sea, trace-fossil assemblages, and facies stacking patterns as an archive of the underlying controls on deposit architecture (e.g., seismicity, climate change, autocyclicity). Topics include modern and ancient deep-water sedimentary environments, tectonic settings, and how basinal and extra-basinal processes generate the typical characteristics of basin slopes, submarine canyons, contourite mounds and drifts, submarine fans, basin floors and abyssal plains.
Part I: Process and Product
Chapter 1: Physical and biological processes
Chapter 2: Sediments (facies)
Chapter 3: Deep-water ichnology (contributed by Thomas Heard)
Chapter 4: Time-space integration
Chapter 5: Statistical properties of sediment gravity flow (SGF) deposits
Part II: Systems
Chapter 6: Sediment drifts and abyssal sediment waves
Chapter 7: Submarine fans and related depositional systems: Modern
Chapter 8: Submarine fans and related depositional systems: Ancient
Part III: Plate tectonics and sedimentation
Chapter 9: Evolving and mature extensional systems
Chapter 10: Subduction margins
Chapter 11: Foreland basins
Chapter 12: Strike-slip continental margin basins
References
Index
Richard N. Hiscott is an Emeritus Professor at Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada. His 40 years of process-oriented research covers ancient deep-sea to alluvial facies of Proterozoic to Cretaceous age, four Ocean Drilling Program campaigns including Amazon submarine fan, Quaternary sedimentology of the Labrador Sea, Santa Monica Basin, and the Black Sea region including dynamics of the saline gravity current that enters the low-salinity Black Sea through the Bosphorus Strait.