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turbidite
[ tur-bi-dahyt ]
noun
- a sedimentary deposit laid down by a turbidity current.
turbidite
/ ˈtɜːbɪˌdaɪt /
noun
- a sediment deposited by a turbidity current
turbidite
/ tûr′bĭ-dīt′ /
- A sedimentary deposit formed by a turbidity current. Turbidites usually consist of a sequence of sediments in which the bottom layers contain the coarsest grains and the upper layers the finest, such as a sequence of sand that is overlain by silt, which in turn is overlain by clay.
Word History and Origins
Origin of turbidite1
Word History and Origins
Origin of turbidite1
Example Sentences
The two-layered turbidite “has to be two quakes recorded together”.
Then, at some later point, the northern San Andreas also shook, causing the second turbidite layer to form.
“If you shake the whole lake basin, a lot of sediment along the shoreline will fail and just run to the bottom of the basin and leave what is called a turbidite, which is just a submarine landslide deposit,” Goldfinger said in an interview at OSU’s vast geologic core repository.
Nowadays, the bigger the storm, the bigger the grain size of the resultant turbidite.
So it is curious that turbidite grains laid down during the Younger Dryas had an average diameter of 23 microns whereas those from the subsequent, warmer years averaged 19 microns.
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