ALLOCYCLIC CONTROLS ON LATE QUATERNARY SEDIMENTATION IN THE EASTERN GULF OF SANTA CATALINA, OFFSHORE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Cores from the floor and levee of Newport channel show turbidity current flows contributed to eGoSC during the late Pleistocene and continuing through the Holocene marine transgression. During marine transgression, multiple canyon heads developed on the Long Beach Shelf, probably because of fluvial system migration. Less prominent fluvial systems that fed the slope gullies were unable to keep pace with marine transgression, and as a result, the gullies were deprived of sediment. Some slope-gullies remain active in the modern, probably as a result of seismically-triggered turbidity currents along the Newport-Inglewood-Rose Canyon Fault Zone.
The evolution of the Newport Canyon-channel system reflects encroachment on the east from slope progradation. The bathymetric relief that narrowed eGoSC at its southern end may have formed above blind thrust faults. As a result, the multiple canyon heads coalesce >30 km south of the shelf edge. Immediately down system, a buried bathymetric ridge and slope gully sediment deflect flows to the west, extending the channel to the head of the San Diego Trough >30 km away.