Joint 72nd Annual Southeastern/ 58th Annual Northeastern Section Meeting - 2023

Paper No. 29-5
Presentation Time: 2:55 PM

NEUMANN ON NORTHERN GREAT BAHAMA BANK, 1989-1994: ACCOMMODATION AND HURRICANES AND WHITINGS, OH MY!


BOSS, Steve, University of Arkansas, Dept of Geosciences, U. of Arkansas, Dept. of Geosciences, Dept. of Geosciences, Fayetteville, AR 72701

During the interval 1989-1994, Conrad Neumann was engaged in studies across Northern Great Bahama Bank focused on elucidating post-glacial sea-level rise on the Bahamas platform and attempting to decipher the ensuing sedimentary record of inundation. High-resolution, single-channel seismic profiles, coring, and underwater excavations provided primary information on Holocene sediment thickness across the northern bank-top and permitted analysis of sediment thickness versus accommodation space. Results demonstrated that sediment thickness and accommodation were uncorrelated. In 1992, Hurricane Andrew passed over the northern bank-top, traversing between the Berry Islands on the east and Bimini on the west. This provided opportunistic research on the impact of a major tropical cyclone on sedimentation and sediment geometries in shallow carbonate environments. Pre- and post-hurricane seismic profiles indicated no appreciable alteration of sediment geometries along the hurricane track. Reanalysis of meteorological data showed that Hurricane Andrew weakened substantially as it traversed the shallow bank-top thus limiting its capacity to alter sediment accumulations. Finally, the research on Northern Great Bahama Bank reviewed the geographic distribution of whitings using satellite imagery, identifying the central bank-top as the prime locus for whiting formation. A novel fluid dynamic process of sediment resuspension (turbulent bursts) was suggested as a potential mechanism triggering whiting occurrences on the central bank-top. The three papers derived from this work are enduring contributions to knowledge of carbonate sedimentation on shallow platforms that are still cited more than 25 years after their publication.