New stratigraphic and high-resolution seismic data from the Bengal Fan indicate that the world's largest fan shows active growth during the most recent sea-level rise and the recent highstand. This unique phenomenon contradicts common sequence-stratigraphic models, and the sediment preserved provides new insight into the sedimentological response of a fan system to sea-level rise, climatic terminations, and monsoon intensity during the past climatic cycle. We present a detailed dated sequence of turbidite sedimentation based on a core transect perpendicular to the active channel-levee system in the upper mid-fan area. Between the two major terminations 1a (12 800 14C yr B.P.) and 1b (9700 14C yr B.P.), and especially at the end of the Young...
Three deep holes, with a maximum penetration of 960 m below Sea floor, were drilled into the distal ...
We conducted a multidisciplinary study to provide the stratigraphic and palaeoclimatic context of mo...
Three closely spaced sites located 800 km south of Sri Lanka on the distal Bengal Fan were drilled d...
We obtained sediment physical properties and geochemical data from 47 piston and gravity cores locat...
The seafloor of the Bay of Bengal is covered by thick sediment deposits that constitute the largest ...
International audienceThe eastern levee of the Active Channel in the Bengal fan has been investigate...
The Bengal Fan has developed as a result of the collision of India with Asia, resulting in the oroge...
The Bengal fan is the largest submarine fan in the world that has formed as a result of high sedimen...
The Bengal Fan contains the most complete record of Himalayan climate and tectonics. As the largest ...
International audienceWe investigate chronology and age uncertainty for the middle to upper Pleistoc...
The Bengal Fan has developed as a result of the collision of India with Asia, resulting in the oroge...
International audienceDrill sites in the southern Bay of Bengal at 3 degrees N 91 degrees E (Interna...
Drill sites in the southern Bay of Bengal at 3°N 91°E (International Ocean Discovery Program Expedit...
International Ocean Discovery Expedition 354 to 8°N in the Bay of Bengal drilled a seven site, 320 k...
The Bengal Fan which extends over a distance of 3000 km from the northern end of the Bay of Bengal b...
Three deep holes, with a maximum penetration of 960 m below Sea floor, were drilled into the distal ...
We conducted a multidisciplinary study to provide the stratigraphic and palaeoclimatic context of mo...
Three closely spaced sites located 800 km south of Sri Lanka on the distal Bengal Fan were drilled d...
We obtained sediment physical properties and geochemical data from 47 piston and gravity cores locat...
The seafloor of the Bay of Bengal is covered by thick sediment deposits that constitute the largest ...
International audienceThe eastern levee of the Active Channel in the Bengal fan has been investigate...
The Bengal Fan has developed as a result of the collision of India with Asia, resulting in the oroge...
The Bengal fan is the largest submarine fan in the world that has formed as a result of high sedimen...
The Bengal Fan contains the most complete record of Himalayan climate and tectonics. As the largest ...
International audienceWe investigate chronology and age uncertainty for the middle to upper Pleistoc...
The Bengal Fan has developed as a result of the collision of India with Asia, resulting in the oroge...
International audienceDrill sites in the southern Bay of Bengal at 3 degrees N 91 degrees E (Interna...
Drill sites in the southern Bay of Bengal at 3°N 91°E (International Ocean Discovery Program Expedit...
International Ocean Discovery Expedition 354 to 8°N in the Bay of Bengal drilled a seven site, 320 k...
The Bengal Fan which extends over a distance of 3000 km from the northern end of the Bay of Bengal b...
Three deep holes, with a maximum penetration of 960 m below Sea floor, were drilled into the distal ...
We conducted a multidisciplinary study to provide the stratigraphic and palaeoclimatic context of mo...
Three closely spaced sites located 800 km south of Sri Lanka on the distal Bengal Fan were drilled d...