Environmental marine geoscience 4: Georgia basin: seabed features and marine geohazards.SUMMARY A multibeam bathymetric ba·thym·e·try n. The measurement of the depth of bodies of water. bath y·met swath-mapping program of the Strait of
Georgia Noun 1. Strait of Georgia - the strait separating Vancouver Island from the Canadian mainland has provided a 5-m resolution map of the seabed. Numerous
geological features of the basin, some of which are considered
geohazards, are clearly defined. During the Olympia interglacial in·ter·gla·cial adj. Occurring between glacial epochs. n. A comparatively short period of warmth during an overall period of glaciation. period most of the basin was filled with sediment and then subsequently excavated during the Fraser Glaciation, except for a group of isolated banks; the southern basin was partially filled by the prograding Fraser River Fraser River River, south-central British Columbia, Can. Rising in the Rocky Mountains near Yellowhead Pass, it flows northwest and south nearly to the U.S. border. It then turns west through the Coast Mountains in a spectacular canyon to empty into the Strait of Georgia Delta during the Holocene. Marine geohazards that exist in this seismically active region include, slope stability The field of slope stability encompasses the analysis of static and dynamic stability of slopes of earth and rock-fill dams, slopes of other types of embankments, excavated slopes, and natural slopes in soil and soft rock. features, active faults, gas pockmarks, and large migrating sedimentary bedforms. Other features, such as sponge reefs, have developed because of the glacial history and dynamic oceanography oceanography, study of the seas and oceans. The major divisions of oceanography include the geological study of the ocean floor (see plate tectonics) and features; physical oceanography, which is concerned with the physical attributes of the ocean water, such as of the basin and provide unique and critical habitats to marine species. SUMMAIRE Un programme de leve par balayage bathymetrique a faisceaux multiples dans le detroit de Georgie a permis la production d'une carte du fond marin d'une resolution de 5 m. De nombreux elements geologiques du bassin y sont clairement definis, dont certains constituent des georisques clairement definis. Durant la periode interglaciaire d'Olympia, la plus grande partie du bassin a ete rempli de sediments, lesquels ont par la suite ete excaves durant la glaciation de Fraser, sauf un groupe de bancs isoles; la partie sud du bassin a ete partiellement remplie par progradation du delta de la riviere ri·vière n. A necklace of precious stones, generally set in one strand. [French rivière (de diamants), river (of diamonds), from Old French rivere, from Vulgar Latin Fraser a l'Holocene. Les georisques matins mat·ins n. (used with a sing. or pl. verb) 1. a. Ecclesiastical The office that formerly constituted together with lauds the first of the seven canonical hours. b. de cette region d'activite sismique comprennent certains elements de stabilite des talus talus (tā`ləs), deposit of rock fragments detached from cliffs or mountain slopes by weathering and piled up at their bases. A talus is a common geologic feature in regions of high cliffs. , des failles actives, des crateres d'echappement de gaz, et de grands elements topographiques sedimentaires migrants. D'autres elements, comme des recifs de spongiaires se sont developpes a cause de l'histoire glaciaire et de la dynamique oceanographique du bassin, constituent un habitat essentiel pour des especes marines. INTRODUCTION The spectacular landscape of the Georgia Basin surrounds a bountiful inland sea Inland Sea, Jap. Seto-naikai, arm of the Pacific Ocean, c.3,670 sq mi (9,510 sq km), S Japan, between Honshu, Shikoku, and Kyushu islands. It is linked to the Sea of Japan by a narrow channel. that encompasses three areas: Puget Sound Puget Sound (py `jĕt), arm of the Pacific Ocean, NW Wash., connected with the Pacific by Juan de Fuca Strait, entered through the Admiralty Inlet and extending in two arms c. , the
Strait of Georgia and the Juan de Fuca Strait Juan de Fuca Strait (wän də fy `kə), inlet of the Pacific Ocean, 100 mi (161 km) long and 11 to 17 mi (18–27 km) wide, between Vancouver Island, British Columbia, and and connecting straits
(Fig. 1). The basin is surrounded by the largest coastal population and
development growth in the country and lies within the most seismically
active zone in Canada (Rogers, 1998). The Fraser River Delta, located in
the southern Strait of Georgia (Fig. 2), is of particular concern
(Groulx and Mustard, 2004) because it is the site of a significant
population, ferry terminals, port facilities, airport, a major fishery,
and a critical electrical transmission and communication cable corridor
to Vancouver Island Vancouver Island (1991 pop. 579,921), 12,408 sq mi (32,137 sq km), SW British Columbia, Canada, in the Pacific Ocean; largest island off W North America. It is c.285 mi (460 km) long and c. . Furthermore, the rate of development in the basin
continues to increase. Recent geophysical surveys have delineated active
faults within the basin (Barrie and Hill, 2004), yet the response of the
basin to a major earthquake remains largely unknown. The submarine and
coastal parts of this basin are thus subject to both large development
pressures and natural geologic hazards A geologic hazard is one of several types of adverse geologic conditions capable of causing damage or loss of property and life. These hazards can consist of sudden or slow phenomena:
[FIGURE 1 & 2 OMITTED] To help safeguard the population, protect existing and future development, and effectively manage the resources and future use of the basin, the Geological Survey The term geological survey can be used to describe both the conduct of a survey for geological purposes and an institution holding geological information. A geological survey of Canada initiated a multi-year mapping program in 1999. The primary dataset consists of contiguous multibeam swath bathymetric coverage of the central and southern Strait of Georgia, eastern Juan de Fuca Strait and the inter-island waterways that separate the two straits. The specific objectives of the program are to map the distribution of different seafloor types; predict sub-seabed geotechnical conditions through an understanding of Quaternary quaternary /qua·ter·nary/ (kwah´ter-nar?e) 1. fourth in order. 2. containing four elements or groups. qua·ter·nar·y adj. 1. Consisting of four; in fours. processes; determine the seafloor expression of earthquakes (neotectonics ne·o·tec·ton·ics n. (used with a sing. verb) A technique for predicting earthquakes that involves measuring the rate of slippage of landmarks along faults. ); and establish the geologic controls on geohazards such as slope instability and tsunamis. One result of the mapping program is the first complete visualization of the morphology of the marine basin, equivalent to that provided by high resolution topographic maps on land. Numerous previously unidentified features of the seafloor have been revealed and new insights into the Quaternary history and active processes have been obtained. The objective of this investigation is to highlight the initial findings of the program in the Georgia Basin and display, for the first time, the multibeam image of the basin. SETTING The modern Georgia Basin, in part, overlaps two older sedimentary basins; a Late Cretaceous foreland basin preserved as the Nanaimo Group (Mustard, 1994; Mustard and Rouse, 1994; England and Bustin, 1998) and an early Tertiary non-marine basin dominated by the sedimentary rocks of the Chuckanut Formation (Johnson, 1984; Mustard and Rouse, 1994). The basin lies between southern British Columbia, Vancouver Island and Washington State (Fig. 1). Subsidence began in the Late Cretaceous (90 million years ago) and the tectonic regime, over the last 40 million years, has been dominated by subduction sub·duc·tion n. A geologic process in which one edge of one crustal plate is forced below the edge of another. [French, from Latin subductus, past participle of of the Juan de Fuca Plate The Juan de Fuca Plate, named after the explorer, is a tectonic plate arising from the Juan de Fuca Ridge, and subducting under the northerly portion of the western side of the North American Plate. . The North American Plate The North American Plate is a tectonic plate covering most of North America, extending eastward to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and westward to the Cherskiy Range in East Siberia. is presently overriding the oceanic Juan de Fuca Plate at a rate of about 45 mm/yr (Riddihough and Hyndman, 1991). The basin consists of a series of structural depressions, over-deepened by Tertiary erosion and Quaternary glaciation, and partially infilled by glacial and post-glacial sediment. The Strait of Georgia is approximately 220 km long in a northwest-southeast direction between Vancouver Island and the mainland; the overall width varies from 25 to 55 km. The average depth of the Strait of Georgia is 155 m and the deepest point is 420 m (Thomson, 1981). Large areas of the strait reach depths of between 100 to 250 m, although several shallow banks exist down the axis of the the diameter of the sphere which is perpendicular to the plane of the circle. See also: Axis basin. The strait connects with the open sea in the south, first through the Gulf Islands and San Juan Islands San Juan Islands (săn wän), archipelago of 172 islands constituting San Juan co., NW Wash., E of Vancouver Island. The islands were visited and named c.1790 by Spanish explorers. , and then through the Juan de Fuca Strait (Fig. 1). Bottom topography in the Gulf/San Juan Islands area is complex but mostly shallower than 100 m, except for a few narrow, deep channels. In the north, the Strait of Georgia connects to the open shelf of Queen Charlotte Sound Queen Charlotte Sound Broad, deep inlet of the Pacific Ocean indenting western British Columbia, Canada. Bounded on the north by the Queen Charlotte Islands and on the south by Vancouver Island, the sound feeds into a series of straits that once were the paths followed by through four narrow channels having sill depths of 90 m or less. Three types of earthquakes occur and have distinct source regions within the basin (Rogers, 1998): continental crust earthquakes, deep earthquakes within the subducting oceanic plate, and very large earthquakes on the boundary between the continental and subducting oceanic plates. Crustal crust·al adj. Of or relating to a crust, especially that of the earth or the moon. Adj. 1. crustal - of or relating to or characteristic of the crust of the earth or moon earthquakes are the most common and result from a compressive stress parallel to the continental margin, oriented north-northwest (Rogers, 1998). Both the largest historic earthquake in south-western British Columbia, on central Vancouver Island in 1946 (M = 7.3), and the large prehistoric Seattle earthquake (M = 7+) were crustal earthquakes. Higher magnitude subcrustal earthquakes are caused by a tensional stress regime within the subducting plate in a depth range of 45 to 65 km (Rogers, 1998), the February 2001 Nisqually earthquake (M = 6.8) in Washington State being a recent example. The largest and least frequent earthquakes, subduction earthquakes, have occurred at intervals of several centuries with the most recent one in 1700 (Satake et al., 1996). Glaciation affected the Pacific margin of Canada many times, although extensive evidence has been found for only the youngest glacial episode over much of the area (Barrie and Conway, 2002). The Fraser Glaciation began approximately 25,000--30,000 years ago (Clague, 1977, 1981) and during the early stages thick, well-sorted sand deposits (Quadra Sand) were deposited in front of, and possibly along the margins of, glaciers moving down the Strait of Georgia as distal outwash outwash Deposit of sand and gravel carried by running water from the melting ice of a glacier and laid down in stratified deposits. An outwash may be as much as 330 ft (100 m) thick at the edge of a glacier, and it may extend for many miles. aprons (Clague, 1976, 1977, 1994). Ice moving south from the Coast Mountains of the Canadian Cordillera cor·dil·le·ra n. An extensive chain of mountains or mountain ranges, especially the principal mountain system of a continent. [Spanish, from cordilla, diminutive of cuerda, cord and Vancouver Island progressively coalesced co·a·lesce intr.v. co·a·lesced, co·a·lesc·ing, co·a·lesc·es 1. To grow together; fuse. 2. To come together so as to form one whole; unite: , over-rode and eroded these deposits. Ice flowing southeastward along the axis of the Strait of Georgia joined ice coming out of the Fraser Valley and then divided into two tongues, one following Juan de Fuca Strait toward the ocean and the other going southward into Puget Sound. This large glacier reached the south end of the Puget Lowland and the western Juan de Fuca Strait at its maximum extent (Waitt and Thorson, 1983; Hewitt and Mosher A mosher is a person who is crossed between goth/punk/skater they have long hair and listen to music like slipknot and metal music. Some people call them headbangers. At certain music shows they have something called a mosh pit, basically its a fight pit with loads of people bashing each other. , 2001; Mosher and Johnson, 2001), at about 14,000 [C.sup.14] BP (Porter and Swanson, 1998) and it deposited an ice-contact diamicton of variable thickness throughout most of the basin. Most of the Strait of Georgia was ice-free by 11,300 [C.sup.14] BP (Barrie and Conway, 2002); deglaciation de·gla·ci·a·tion n. The uncovering of glaciated land because of melting or sublimation of the glacier. deglaciation The uncovering of land that was previously covered by a glacier. was very rapid with regional downwasting and widespread stagnation Stagnation A period of little or no growth in the economy. Economic growth of less than 2-3% is considered stagnation. Sometimes used to describe low trading volume or inactive trading in securities. Notes: A good example of stagnation was the U.S. economy in the 1970s. (Gullbault et al., 2003). This resulted in a stratigraphy stratigraphy, branch of geology specifically concerned with the arrangement of layered rocks (see stratification). Stratigraphy is based on the law of superposition, which states that in a normal sequence of rock layers the youngest is on top and the oldest on the comprising thick (30--60 m) diamicton (till), overlain o·ver·lain v. Past participle of overlie. by a unit of ice-proximal glaciomarine sediments and a thin, discontinuous discontinuous /dis·con·tin·u·ous/ (dis?kon-tin´u-us) 1. interrupted; intermittent; marked by breaks. 2. discrete; separate. 3. lacking logical order or coherence. ice-distal glaciomarine unit (Barrie and Conway, 2002). Within the southern Strait of Georgia, sedimentation from the Fraser River dominates the surficial sur·fi·cial adj. Of, relating to, or occurring on or near the surface of the earth. [surf(ace) + (superf)icial.] Adj. 1. geology where Holocene sediment thicknesses vary from zero on Pleistocene ridges to greater than 300 m (Mosher and Hamilton, 1998). Present day sedimentation rates vary from 10 cm/year near the river mouth, to less than 3 cm/year in the distal parts of the prodelta (Hart et al., 1998). Modern circulation in the Strait of Georgia is characteristic of a partially mixed estuary having moderately strong tidal currents (2.6-3.4 m tidal range), seasonally varying stratification and late summer and late winter deep-water density intrusions (LeBlond, 1983; Crean and Ages, 1971; Thomson, 1994; Masson, 2002). The Fraser River runoff reaches a maximum of 10,000 [m.sup.3]/s during the spring freshet and a minimum of around 1,000 [m.sup.3]/s in late winter. The Fraser River accounts for about 73% of the mean annual freshwater discharge of 158 x [10.sup.9] [m.sup.3] into the Strait of Georgia (Johannessen et al., 2003). This freshwater influx then forces estuarine es·tu·a·rine adj. 1. Of, relating to, or found in an estuary. 2. Geology Formed or deposited in an estuary. Adj. 1. estuarine - of or relating to or found in estuaries estuarial circulation in the southern strait, which is characterized by a net outflow of low salinity water toward Juan de Fuca Strait in the upper layer (<50 m depth), and a net northward inflow of high salinity water in the lower part of the water column that reaches the Strait of Georgia in late summer (Mosher and Thomson, 2002). METHODS During several field programs from 2000 to 2004 (Fig. 2), about 5000 k[m.sup.2] of multibeam swath bathymetry ba·thym·e·try n. The measurement of the depth of bodies of water. bath y·met coverage was obtained over
the central and southern Strait of Georgia. The objective of this
mapping project was to collect contiguous full seafloor coverage of the
strait. The surveys were carried out from the CCGS CCGS Canadian Coast Guard ShipCCGS Cass County Genealogical Society (Texas) CCGS Cell Cycle Block, G1-to-S CCGS Clermont County Genealogical Society (Clermont County, Ohio) CCGS Cape Cod Genealogical Society Library R.B. Young, CCGS Vector, and Revisor by the Canadian Hydrographic Service ![]() Canadian Hydrographic Service logo or crest The Canadian Hydrographic Service , in cooperation with the Geological Survey of Canada, using a hull-mounted Kongsberg-Simrad EM1002 system for the deeper regions of the basin (> 50 m water depth) and a hull-mounted Kongsberg-Simrad EM3000 system for the shallow parts of the basin (< 50 m water depth). The tracks were positioned so as to insonify 100% of the seafloor with a 100% overlap. Positioning was by broadcast differential GPS and the multibeam data were corrected for sound speed variations in the stratified stratified /strat·i·fied/ (strat´i-fid) formed or arranged in layers. strat·i·fied adj. Arranged in the form of layers or strata. water column using frequent sound speed casts. The data were edited for spurious bathymetric and navigational points and subsequently processed using CARIS CARIS Current Agricultural Research Information System CARIS Caribbean Agricultural Research Information System CARIS CILHI Automated Recovery Identification System CARIS Centre for Applied Research in Information Systems software. The gridded data were exported as ASCII files and imported into ArcInfo software for processing and image production. The multibeam swath images formed the interpretive framework for delineation of geological features including potential hazards. Based on this interpretation, several areas were high-lighted for further investigation. In November 2000, aboard the CCGS John P. Tully The CCGS John P. Tully is a vessel in the Canadian Coast Guard.[1] The ship has been employed on joint research voyages with a variety of United States agencies, including the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. , and again in December 2001, aboard CCGS Vector, surveys were undertaken using Huntec DTS (1) (Digital Theatre Sound) A digital audio encoding system used in movie and home theaters. Popularized by the movie Jurassic Park, the six-channel (5. high-resolution sub-bottom profiler, 10 cubic inch airgun and Simrad MS992 sidescan sonar (Mosher and Simpkin, 1999). In addition, piston cores were collected from the central and southern Strait of Georgia during the 2000 program. The cores were split in the laboratory, photographed and sampled for textural analyses, radiocarbon dating, as well as foraminiferal, pollen and diatom diatom (dī`ətŏm', -tōm'), unicellular organism of the kingdom Protista, characterized by a silica shell of often intricate and beautiful sculpturing. Most diatoms exist singly, although some join to form colonies. analyses. The results of the foraminiferal, pollen and diatom analyses are presented in Guilbault et al. (2003). OBSERVATIONS Geological Features Bedrock Deposition of the Fraser River sediment is not ubiquitous in the central and southern Strait of Georgia. As a result, part of the basin has limited or no sedimentation. For example, on the western side of the basin into Boundary Pass and opposite the delta, bedrock is well exposed (Fig. 2). The basin is moderately deformed along a series of mainly northwest trending faults and folds (Fig. 3) having northeast to east dipping beds (Mustard, 1994). Figure 3 is an example of a northwest trending fold that occurs at the northern extension of a rock ridge that runs parallel to the eastern side of the strait adjacent to the Gulf Islands (Fig. 2). [FIGURE 3 OMITTED] Basin Banks Clague (1977) suggested that Georgia Basin would have filled with sediment during the nonglacial to glacial transition at the beginning of the Fraser Glaciation. Ice moving south from the Coast Mountains of the Canadian Cordillera and Vancouver Island coalesced and eroded these deposits. However, as with the coastal Quadra Sand deposits (Clague, 1976, 1977, 1994), not all of these pre-glacial deposits were eroded and removed by the Cordilleran ice. Thick Quaternary sediment, occurring in several banks and shoals within the basin, represents remnants of these pre-glacial sediments (Figs. 4 and 5). The major banks of the central Strait of Georgia (Fig. 1) basin are made up of greater than 80 m of highly stratified sediment composed of well-sorted very fine silt (Fig. 5). The stratified muds contain very few marine and non-marine macro or microfossils suggesting rapid deposition in a brackish brack·ish adj. 1. Having a somewhat salty taste, especially from containing a mixture of seawater and fresh water: "You could cut the brackish winds with a knife/Here in Nantucket" or marginal marine environment. A borehole bore·hole n. A hole that is drilled into the earth, as in exploratory well drilling or in building construction. drilled into this sediment facies facies /fa·ci·es/ (fa´she-ez) pl. fa´cies [L.] 1. the face. 2. surface; the outer aspect of a body part or organ. 3. expression (1). in Malaspina Strait (Fig. 1) returned dates from wood debris of 41,260 to 43,020 [C.sup.14] BP (Table 1), dating to the late stages of the Olympia interglacial and the early stage of the Quadra Sand (Clague, 1989). The banks tend to have steep north to northwest faces that have slopes in excess of 25[degrees], where the flat lying strata are exposed (Figs. 4 and 5). Generally, these units are overlain, conformably con·form·a·ble adj. 1. Corresponding; similar: plans that are conformable to your wishes. 2. Quick to comply; submissive. 3. , by an ice-contact diamicton. [FIGURE 4 & 5 OMITTED] Glacial Flutes On the central banks of the strait, linear ridges are apparent. These constructional fluted tills formed by the action of the glaciers moving down the Strait of Georgia, particularly where bedrock or Pleistocene highs, such as Halibut halibut: see flatfish. halibut Any of various flatfishes, especially the Atlantic and Pacific halibuts (genus Hippoglossus, family Pleuronectidae), both of which have eyes and colour on the right side. Bank (Fig. 6), formed obstructions to the flow. The orientation of the ice movement (100-110[degrees]) down the axis of the strait is clearly evident from the flutes (Fig. 6). [FIGURE 6 OMITTED] Sponge Reefs Siliceous siliceous relating to or made of silica or a silicate. sponges form reefs on Fraser Ridge (Fig. 7), an isolated bank just off the Fraser Delta (Conway et al., 2004a), and in two areas of McCall and Halibut Bank (Figs. 2 and 6; Conway et al., 2004b). The Fraser Ridge complex has formed in an area where sedimentation rates adjacent to the reef site are greater than 2 cm/year (Conway et al., 2004a). The Fraser Ridge reefs consist of roughly circular inter-connected mounds up to 14 m in height and 200 m in diameter, found in water depths of 150 to 190 m and restricted to the top and flanks of an isolated promontory promontory /prom·on·to·ry/ (prom´on-tor?e) a projecting process or eminence. prom·on·to·ry n. A projecting part. promontory a projecting process or eminence. in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?" midmost of the rapidly expanding Holocene prodelta (Fig. 7). Two species of hexactinosidan sponges, Aphrocallistes vastus and Heterochone calyx calyx (kā`lĭks): see sepal. , build a framework of densely packed sponge skeletons while several other species of hexactinellida and demosponges are accessory fauna. [FIGURE 7 OMITTED] The McCall and Halibut Bank reefs occur in a submarine valley formed between banks and on the northern fluted flank of Halibut Bank, in water depths from 120 to 210 m (Fig. 6). The reefs are up to 14 m in height, are bedform-like in shape and aspect ratio (Fig. 6), and have a wavelength of between 30 and 100 m. Morphologic differences in the frame-building species are interpreted as responses to the extremely different environmental conditions of the sediment starved northern BC shelf (Conway et al., 1991, 2001; Krautter et al., 2001) versus the turbid tur·bid adj. Having sediment or foreign particles stirred up or suspended; muddy; cloudy. tur·bid i·ty n. delta habitats of the Fraser Ridge (Conway et al., 2004a). The
reefs of Halibut and McCall Bank are similar to the northern BC reef
complexes, and like the Fraser Ridge reefs, are composed of only the two
species (Conway et al., 2004b).Foreslope Hills The central basin of south-central Strait of Georgia, an area of >60 k[m.sup.2], has a ridge and swale swale n. 1. A low tract of land, especially when moist or marshy. 2. A long, narrow, usually shallow trough between ridges on a beach, running parallel to the coastline. 3. morphology, which has been identified as the Foreslope Hills (Mathews and Shepard, 1962; Terzaghi, 1962; Hamilton and Wigen, 1987; Hart, 1993). Mosher and Thomson (2002) recently interpreted these 20 m high, >5 km long ridges (Fig. 7) as sedimentary bedforms, similar to many deep-water sediment waves. To generate these waves there is a requirement for the initial seabed surface to have some regular rugosity rugosity /ru·gos·i·ty/ (roo-gos´i-te) 1. a condition of being rugose. 2. a fold, wrinkle, or ruga. ru·gos·i·ty n. The state or condition of being rugose. (Mosher and Thomson, 2002). The initial rugosity upon which the Foreslope Hills developed may be related to en echelon thrust faulting of the Cretaceous to Holocene sediments in the northwest quadrant of the Foreslope Hills, which created the seabed structure that is part of the Porlier Pass Fault (Fig. 3, Barrie and Hill, 2004). Geohazards Pockmarks Pockmarks or seafloor craters, reaching tens of metres wide and several metres deep, are typically found in groups (Hovland and Judd, 1988) and are formed by the removal of sediment as fluid (commonly gas) escapes into the water column. On the western slope of the Norwegian Trench, elongated e·lon·gate tr. & intr.v. e·lon·gat·ed, e·lon·gat·ing, e·lon·gates To make or grow longer. adj. or elongated 1. Made longer; extended. 2. Having more length than width; slender. depressions associated with pockmarks have been related to faulting within soft, silty, unconsolidated clay sediments (Hovland, 1983). Aligned pockmarks within the Ibiza Channel, in the western Mediterranean, have formed by the escape of gases and associated waters through faults from a hydrothermal hydrothermal, hydrothermic relating to the temperature effects of water, as in hot baths. field beneath the surficial sediments (Acosta et al., 2001). Shallow submarine slides in the Eivissa Channel of the western Mediterranean Sea are associated with pockmark pockmark /pock·mark/ (pok´mahrk) a depressed scar left by a pustule. pock·mark n. A pitlike scar that is left on the skin by smallpox or another eruptive disease. swarms (Lastras et al., 2004). Similarly, the linear pockmark chains identified by Barrie and Hill (2004) off the Fraser River Delta foreslope (Fig. 6) have been associated with crustal faulting. Other areas of pockmarks that show definite orientation occur in the central and northern strait and could also indicate faults. A field of up to 200 pockmarks has been discovered on the seabed of English Bay, at the entrance to Vancouver Harbour (Hill, 2003). These pockmarks are located in water depths from 18 to 65 m, range in diameter from 15 to 100 m and are 5 to 15 m deep. Mainly circular in plan, the pockmarks are in places aligned along linear traces and coalesce co·a·lesce intr.v. co·a·lesced, co·a·lesc·ing, co·a·lesc·es 1. To grow together; fuse. 2. To come together so as to form one whole; unite: to form more irregular, near-linear trenches similar to the pockmarks along the Fraser Delta Fault (Fig. 6). Some pockmarks are located in designated shipping lanes for vessels approaching the Vancouver Port and others coincide with designated anchorages for large vessels waiting outside the port (Hill, 2003). Active Faults Multibeam bathymetric data collected in the Strait of Georgia have revealed two areas of seabed disturbance, interpreted to be faults (Barrie and Hill, 2004). The easterly fault zone (Fraser Delta Fault) is defined by a pockmark chain that extends along strike from a known, southwesterly south·west·er·ly adj. 1. Situated toward the southwest. 2. Coming or being from the southwest. south·west dipping fault having a throw of over 50 m (Fig. 6). The pockmarks occur in a region of high sedimentation, located in the Fraser River prodelta. The western strait fault zone (Porlier Pass Fault, Fig. 3) occurs within a fold of the Cretaceous Nanaimo Group, where a series of thrust faults displace Cretaceous to Holocene sediments by up to 40 m with over 2 km of along-strike-surface expression. These faults are considered to be active based on Holocene stratigraphic stra·tig·ra·phy n. The study of rock strata, especially the distribution, deposition, and age of sedimentary rocks. strat displacement in an area of significant sedimentation (Barrie and Hill, 2004). Delta Foreslope Features The Sand Heads submarine channel system, located at the mouth of the main channel of the Fraser River (Fig. 7), is an area of high sediment discharge, which commonly induces liquefaction liquefaction, change of a substance from the solid or the gaseous state to the liquid state. Since the different states of matter correspond to different amounts of energy of the molecules making up the substance, energy in the form of heat must either be supplied to and slope failure at the canyon heads (Kostaschuk et al., 1992; Hart et al., 1992). Four tributary canyons that have steep failure scarps and gullied walls show signs of recent mass-wasting (Carle, 2003). The freshest looking tributary canyon appears to have captured an older channel (directly east and northeast of the feature labelled Submarine Channel in Figure 7). The tributary canyons converge on the delta slope to form a single channel of 100 to 380 m width, 18 to 60 m depth and 6 km length (Hart et al., 1992; Kostaschuk et al., 1992; Christian et al., 1998), with coarse-grained sediment at the base of the channel (Fig. 7). Just to the south of the Sand Heads submarine channel is an area of sub-parallel ridges documented by Terzaghi (1962), Hart et al. (1992) and Christian et al. (1998). The morphology results from either shallow rotational sliding (Hart et al., 1992) or creep deformation (Christian et al., 1997). The ridges are crescentric and have their convex face downslope n. 1. a downward slope. Noun 1. downslope - a downward slope or bend declivity, declination, declension, fall, decline, descent downhill - the downward slope of a hill . They are 2 to 3 m high, have a wavelength between 60 and 100 m and are discontinuous in the along-slope direction. Two smaller channels and several smaller subdued gullies cross the slide complex, and accentuate the junctions between the crescentric ridges (Carle, 2003). South of these ridges is Roberts Bank Channel, Canoe Passage Channel and the Roberts Bank Failure Complex (Hart and Barrie, 1995), is an area of partially exposed relict RELICT. A widow; as A B, relict of C D. distributary dis·trib·u·tar·y n. pl. dis·trib·u·tar·ies A branch of a river that flows away from the main stream. distributary Noun pl -taries channels and channel failures (Fig. 7). The channels of the Roberts Bank Failure Complex were active as early as 3,570 [C.sup.14] BP up to about 100 years ago (Barrie, 2000). Since then, this part of the delta has been eroded by strong tidal currents, which has been enhanced by a limited sediment supply, in part, caused by human development (Hart et al., 1998; Barrie and Currie, 2000). Sedimentary Bedforms Three areas of central and southern Strait of Georgia have fields of active large-scale bedforms, 1) southern Roberts Bank, 2) southern Strait of Georgia, and 3) Boundary Pass (Figs. 7, 8 and 9). Within the Roberts Bank Failure Complex (Fig. 7) is a large subaqueous dune field; dunes have wave-lengths of 10 to 100 m and heights of 0.5 to 5 m (Kostaschuk et al., 1995; Currie and Mosher, 1996). The dune field presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. results from flood-tide, current erosion of delta sediments (Hart et al., 1995; Barrie and Currie, 2000). The dunes may have been generated at this location because of the slight morphological bulge of the Roberts Bank Failure Complex, which induces a local acceleration of the tidal current (Carle, 2003). The southern Strait of Georgia dune field consists of large subaqueous, symmetrical dunes that have wavelengths of 150 to 300 m and wave heights of 2 to 3 m covering an area of 7 k[m.sup.2] (Fig. 8). This field lies just above a depositional boundary and the direction of movement is sub-parallel to the erosional scarp scarp: see escarpment. (Fig. 8). [FIGURE 8 OMITTED] In Boundary Pass, along the US-Canada border (Fig. 1), there is a series of nearly symmetrical, very large subaqueous dunes that have wavelengths between 100 and 300 m, covering an area of 2.5 k[m.sup.2] in 170 to 210 m of water (Figs. 9 and 10); they consist of well-sorted coarse-grained sand and gravel. These features are hydrodynamically formed, of an unknown age, and rank amongst the largest ever observed globally. Similar submarine sand dunes have been identified in the eastern Juan de Fuca Strait (Mosher and Thomson, 2000). The largest of these dunes measures 28 m in height and 760 m in ridge crest length (Figs. 9 and 10). The dunes are classified as linear, slightly asymmetrical, stoss-erosional, lee-depositional, two dimensional, very large dunes (classification nomenclature of Ashley, 1990). Net transport is in a northerly (flood) direction (Fig. 10). [FIGURE 9 & 10 OMITTED] Two current meters were installed, 10 km to the southwest of the dune field by Fisheries and Oceans Canada Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO), is the department within the government of Canada that is responsible for developing and implementing policies and programs in support of Canada's economic, ecological and scientific interests in oceans and inland waters. , for a two year period, at 110 and 125 m water depth. Maximum current velocities of 1.94 m/s occurred in a northeast (flood) direction with the highest recorded ebb velocities of 1.29 m/s. A second mooring MOORING, mar. law. The act of arriving of a ship or vessel at a particular port, and there being anchored or otherwise fastened to the shore. 2. Policies of insurance frequently contain a provision that the ship is insured from one place to another, "and till put in by ASL ASL - Algebraic Specification Language Environmental Services for less than 2 months just northeast of the Fisheries and Oceans mooring measured velocities up to 2.23 m/s within the water column (ASL Environmental Services, 2001). Current velocities over the dunes would be expected to be much higher than those recorded by these two moorings because of topographic constriction constriction /con·stric·tion/ (kon-strik´shun) 1. a narrowing or compression of a part; a stricture.constric´tive 2. a diminution in range of thinking or feeling, associated with diminished spontaneity. of the flow to the east, and because the mooring sites were off to one side of the main channel axis. The water column is primarily well mixed, suggesting the near-bottom velocities could be expected to approach the maximum velocities measured (R. Thomson, personal communication, 2002). Using the currents observed from the two moorings and the mean sediment grain size (0.5 to 1.0 mm) as inputs into the Ashley (1990) classification of large-scale subaqueous bedforms, it is clear that these dunes are mobile. It is likely that deep flood tides and estuarine circulation during summer construct the dunes. The original multibeam survey of the Boundary Pass dunes was undertaken in November 2001; a repeat survey undertaken in October 2003 suggests that the dunes are moving to the north. The question of dune age, mobility, and stability remains unanswered, but is of critical engineering importance for placement of submarine pipelines and cables. Sediment Distribution Pattern Pharo and Barnes (1976) originally described the surficial sediment distribution pattern for the Fraser River Delta, and later, it was described by Barrie and Currie (2000) using a far more detailed sediment sampling grid. Generally, the sediments grade from fine grained sands in the delta front, the wave-influenced part of the delta at the seaward limit of the tidal flat, to silt on the delta slope to clay on the prodelta (Fig. 11). On southern Roberts Bank, this sediment distribution pattern changes from a dominant sandy delta plain that continues and coarsens well out onto the delta slope, but becomes finer grained at the base of the slope (Fig. 11). The mean grain size of the sediment of the delta front and slope is coarser than the present sediment load carried by the Fraser River (Barrie and Currie, 2000), and there is no evidence for present day sedimentation (Hart et al., 1998). This change in sediment pattern over the Roberts Bank Failure Complex is attributed, in part, to restriction of the river channels by jetties, construction of three causeways across the intertidal in·ter·tid·al adj. Of or being the region between the high tide mark and the low tide mark. in delta and dredging of the river over the past century (Hart et al., 1998; Barrie and Currie, 2000; Barrie, 2000). [FIGURE 11 OMITTED] Deposition from the Fraser River plume controls the surficial sediment distribution pattern from the central Strait of Georgia, just south of Texada Island (Fig. 1), to just past the US-Canada border in the south (Fig. 11). North of this area, the surficial sediment distribution pattern is dominated by local sediment inputs and sediment reworking by wave and tidal energy in the shallower waters (Fig. 11). In particular, the shallow coastal plain along eastern Vancouver Island consists largely of low-gradient broad sand and gravel beaches, derived mainly through erosion of abundant unconsolidated sediment underlying the lowland (Clague and Bornhold, 1980). The coastal plain is exposed to the dominant southeasterly south·east·er·ly adj. 1. Situated toward the southeast. 2. Coming or being from the southeast. south·east storm direction, resulting in northerly transport of sandy sediments. In the deeper troughs of northern Strait of Georgia, the sediments are primarily silty clay (Fig. 11). Post-glacial deposition is dominated by river output and modern oceanographic conditions. However, fine-grained deposition is not ubiquitous within the southern Strait of Georgia and in several areas, such as Fraser Ridge (Fig. 7), close to the main channel of the river, no deposition has taken place recently. Two boundaries between contrasting types of thick Holocene deposits are observed on multibeam imagery (Figs. 3 and 8). One of these boundaries is west of the delta, just east of folded Nanaimo Group bedrock (Fig. 3). Another boundary is south of the delta, off Point Roberts, where a sharp contrast in deposition extends across most of the southern Strait (Fig. 8). This boundary is defined by a ragged, erosional escarpment escarpment or scarp, long cliff, bluff, or steep slope, caused usually by geologic faulting (see fault) or by erosion of tilted rock layers. An example of a fault scarp is the north face of the San Jacinto Mts. in California. , where the slope varies from 3 to 4[degrees] to greater than 12[degrees]. The sub-bottom profile (Fig. 8) illustrates the truncated Holocene beds along the steep slope and the eroded glacial to early post-glacial sediments at the base of the slope. SYNTHESIS The contiguous coverage of multibeam swath bathymetry in the central and southern Strait of Georgia, in combination with seismic reflection profiling, provides data necessary to interpret development of the basin morphology. Even though the seafloor of this region of the basin is dominated by discharge from the Fraser River, features from its geological past are evident. Cretaceous to Tertiary bedrock is exposed along the entire western side of the basin and into the Gulf Islands and Boundary Pass (Figs. 2 and 3). Interglacial and preglacial Pre`gla´cial a. 1. (Geol.) Prior to the glacial or drift period. sediments form the banks along the centre of the strait. Generally, these sediments are discontinuous and exist as eroded remnants that have steep slopes. The flat lying strata suggest that the entire basin was infilled about 40,000 years [C.sup.14] BR prior to the last glaciation. As ice moved down the strait, it scoured out most of these sediments and subsequently laid down an extensive diamicton. The remnant Pleistocene highs under the flowing ice allowed for the formation of glacial flutes over many parts of the basin (Fig. 6). Ice-contact diamictons from the Fraser Glaciation are exposed over much of the central and northern strait, evident by the rough bouldery surface (Fig. 4). Preglacial banks, mantled with diamicton provided the requisite habitat for the formation of sponge reefs (Conway et al., 2004b). Sponge reefs have been identified on Fraser Ridge (Conway et al., 2004a), the swale between McCall and Halibut banks, and on the northern slope of Halibut Bank (Fig. 6). The Georgia Basin reefs have formed on glacial highs or on glacial flutes, where the raised surfaces of boulders and cobbles cob·ble 1 n. 1. A cobblestone. 2. Geology A rock fragment between 64 and 256 millimeters in diameter, especially one that has been naturally rounded. 3. cobbles See cob coal. tr. provide a hard substrate for benthic ben·thos n. 1. The collection of organisms living on or in sea or lake bottoms. 2. The bottom of a sea or lake. [Greek. epifaunal organisms to colonize col·o·nize v. col·o·nized, col·o·niz·ing, col·o·niz·es v.tr. 1. To form or establish a colony or colonies in. 2. To migrate to and settle in; occupy as a colony. 3. . Hexactinosan sponges, in particular, use this hard substrate to settle and initiate growth. As the currents deflect and accelerate over and around the elevated ridge, there is greater possibility of increased access to nutrients. The absence of some geological features also provide insight into development chronology. Single channel high-resolution geophysical data (Barrie and Conway, 2002) and foraminifera data from cores (Guilbault et al., 2003) suggest that deglaciation was rapid with in place downwasting and stagnation of the ice at nearly the same time over most of the Strait of Georgia. The multibeam data support this interpretation. Whereas features of glacial advance are abundant (diamictons, flutes), features typical of glacial retreat, such as retreat moraines and iceberg scouring scouring characterized by scour. scouring disease a colloquial name for secondary nutritional copper deficiency. , are clearly not present. Holocene deposition, primarily from the Fraser River, dominates most of the seafloor in the deeper parts of the southern basin. The sediments are rich in organic matter and the prodelta sediments are known to have extensive interstitial gas (Hart and Hamilton, 1993). This gas may give rise to the discontinuous regions of pockmarks within the southern basin. However, the linear chains of pockmarks off the northern delta, which are associated with an active fault (Fig. 6), could also result from thermogenic ther·mo·gen·e·sis n. Generation or production of heat, especially by physiological processes. ther gas accumulations that exist within Tertiary sediments of Georgia Basin (Mustard, 1994; England and Bustin, 1998). The linear pockmark chains, particularly where faults occur, may present a potential zone of migration to the surface. In areas away from the dominant Holocene deposition, strong tidal currents amplified by estuarine flow are capable of moving large volumes of coarse grained sediment and eroding the underlying seabed. Depositional pattern changes, such as found in the southern strait (Fig. 8), may have resulted from current pattern changes related to the rapid progradation of the Fraser River Delta into the southern strait during the Holocene. Anthropogenic an·thro·po·gen·ic adj. 1. Of or relating to anthropogenesis. 2. Caused by humans: anthropogenic degradation of the environment. effects may account for more recent changes in sediment distribution patterns and erosion on Roberts Bank. The new, complete imagery of the seafloor makes potential hazards more apparent. For example, the very large subaqueous dunes of Boundary Pass appear to be migratory and occur in an area of seabed cables and a proposed gas pipeline. Understanding the migration rates and patterns of these dunes is critical. Active faults and unconsolidated sediments on steep slopes, in a region of significant shallow seismicity seis·mic·i·ty n. The frequency or magnitude of earthquake activity in a given area. seismicity The frequency or magnitude of earthquake activity in a given area. (Cassidy et al., 2000), could generate tsunamis. These potential hazzards, therefore, require further investigation, considering the large and growing population and infrastructure of Georgia Basin, including the urban areas of the Greater Vancouver Regional District and those of eastern Vancouver Island. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This extensive multibeam data set would not exist without the field program management, data collection, and processing capability of the Canadian Hydrographic Service, Pacific. In particular, we would like to acknowledge the valuable support of Rob Hare, Ernest Sargent and Peter Milner. In addition we would like to thank the Captains and crews of CCGS Vector, R.B. Young, John P. Tully, Revisor and Otter Bay for helping us in the field data collection. Technical support for all field operations was provided by Bill Hill, Bob Macdonald and Graham Standen and Robert Kung provided invaluable assistance in the development of the graphics. The manuscript was improved by the critical revision of Peter Mustard, David Mosher, Ralph Currie, and the editors of Geoscience ge·o·sci·ence n. Any one of the sciences, such as geology or geochemistry, that deals with the earth. ge Canada. Support for this work was through the Georgia Basin Geohazards Initiative and the Geoscience for Ocean Management Program of the Geological Survey of Canada. This is Geological Survey of Canada Publication # 2004229. REFERENCES Acosta, J., Munoz, A., Herranz, P., Palomo, C., Ballesteros, M., Vaquero, M. and Uchupi E., 2001, Pockmarks in the Ibiza channel and western end of the Balearic Promontory (western Mediterranean) revealed by multibeam mapping: GeoMarine Letters, v. 21, p. 123-130. 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Riddihough, R.P. and Hyndman, R.D., 1991, Modern plate tectonic regime of the continental margin of western Canada, in Gabrielse, H. and Yorath, C.J., eds., Geology of the Cordilleran Orogen in Canada. Geological Survey of Canada, Geology of Canada, No 4, Chapter 13, p. 435-455. Rogers, G.C., 1998, Earthquakes and earthquake hazard in the Vancouver area, in Clague, J.J., Luternauer, J.C. and Mosher, D.C., eds., Geology and Natural Hazards of the Fraser River Delta, British Columbia. Geological Survey of Canada, Bulletin 525, p. 17-25. Satake, K., Shimazaki, K., Tsuji, Y. and Ueda, K., 1996, Time and size of a giant earthquake in Cascadia inferred from Japanese tsunami records of January 1700: Nature, v. 379, p. 246-249. Terzaghi, K., 1962, Discussion, sedimentation of Fraser River Delta, British Columbia: Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geology, v. 46, p. 1438-1443. Thomson, R.E., 1981, Oceanography of the British Columbia coast The British Columbia Coast is one of Canada's two continental coastlines; the other being the coastline from the Beaufort Sea of the Arctic Ocean via the Northwest Passage and Hudson Bay to the Ungava Peninsula and Labrador and the Gulf of St. : Canadian Special Publications of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 56, 291p. Thomson, R.R., 1994, Physical oceanography of the Strait of Georgia-Puget Sound-Juan de Fuca Strait system, in Wilson, R.H., Beamish, R.J., Aitkens, F. and Bell, J. eds., Review of the Marine Environment and Biota of Strait of Georgia, Puget Sound and Juan de Fuca Strait, Proceedings of the BC/Washington Symposium on the Marine Environment, January 1994, p. 36-100. Waitt, R.B. and Thorson, R.M., 1983, The Cordilleran ice sheet in Washington, Idaho, and Montana, in Porter, S.C., ed., Late-Quaternary Environments of the United States, Volume 1, the Late Pleistocene, University of Minnesota Press The University of Minnesota Press is a university press that is part of the University of Minnesota. External link
GEOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION OF CANADA The Geological Association of Canada promotes and develops the geological sciences in Canada. The organization holds conferences, meetings and exhibitions for the discussion of geological problems and the exchange of views in matters related to geology. (2005-2006) OFFICERS President David Piper Vice-President Robert Marquis Secretary-Treasurer Richard Wardle COUNCILLORS Carolyn ('Lyn) Anglin Kevin Ansdell Sandra Barr Jennifer Bates Penny Colton Mark Fenton Greg Finn Simon Hanmer Michel Malo Robert Marquis Brent Murphy Peter Mustard David Piper James Ryan John Waldron Richard Wardle Reg Wilson STANDING COMMITTEES Awards: Reg Wilson Communications: Reg Wilson Finance: Michel Malo Nominating: Sandra Barr Publications: Jennifer Bates Science Program: Greg Finn J. Vaughn Barrie, Philip R. Hill, Kim W. Conway, Kashka Iwanowska and Kim Picard Geological Survey of Canada, Institute of Ocean Sciences, PO Box 6000, Sidney, British Columbia V8L 4B2 vbarrie@nrcan.gc.ca
Table 1. Radiocarbon dates obtained from a borehole in Malaspina Strait
(Fig. 1) in the central Strait of Georgia.
Lab Core Water Sample Dated Radiocarbon
# Depth Depth Specimen Date (yr BP)
(m) (m)
62770 A4 12 22.9 Wood Fragment 43,020 [+ or -] 900
62770 A4 12 22.9 Wood Fragment 41,260 [+ or -] 730
Radiocarbon analysis undertaken at the Center for Accelerator Mass
Spectrometry, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
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