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turbidity current

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turbidity current

Gravity-driven current in air, water, or other fluid resulting from accumulation of suspended material, such as silt, mud, or volcanic ash, and imparting a density greater than the surrounding fluid. Marine turbidity currents originate from tectonic movement, storm waves, tsunamis (tidal waves) or earthquakes and move rapidly downward, like underwater avalanches, leaving distinctive deposits called turbidites. They are thought to be one of the mechanisms by which submarine canyons are formed.



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We suggest that this increase in height can lead to minimizing the particle deposition in the turbidity current.
It seems interesting that undersea flows have at least one characteristic different from rivers: "While river floods on land can create natural levees a few meters tall, the levees formed by [undersea] turbidity currents can grow up to 100 m[eters] high" ("Hidden Canyons" SN: 1/1/05, p.
In fact, our best "observations" of turbidity current velocities are drawn from records of the time elapsed between progressive down-slope cutting of a series of submarine telecommunication cables as a current flows.
 
 
 
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