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ABSTRACT The 2016 Mw 7.8 Kaikōura Earthquake triggered simultaneous turbidity currents down ten submarine canyons along a 200 km stretch of the continental slope, east of New Zealand. Some discharged into the Hikurangi Channel which flows >1500 km northwards along the abyssal trench floor. To better understand provenance continuity in deep‐sea sedimentary records, foraminiferal samples from the 2016 turbidites from 17 canyon and channel cores were used to investigate the source histories of these submarine gravity flows. Cluster analyses suggest the canyon provenances for most 2016 turbidite faunas should be determinable using a combination of the relative abundance of key benthic genera, planktic foraminiferal index (dissolution), absolute test abundance and planktic % of the foraminiferal faunas. Two ordinations (PCA, PCO) based on these parameters were used to infer provenance and flow history. One hundred kilometres down the Hikurangi Channel, faunas in the 2016 turbidite confirm a Kaikōura Canyon source. Further downstream, 200–500 km north of the confluence with Campbell, Cook and Opouawe canyons, faunas indicate that the 2016 turbidite in the northern Hikurangi Channel is a composite deposit, from an initial Opouawe‐Cook canyon‐sourced turbidity current over‐ridden and partly mixed with, a Kaikōura Canyon‐sourced flow that arrived sometime later.
Hikurangi Channel turbidites, Foraminifera, submarine canyon turbidites, 2016 Kaikoura Earthquake
Hikurangi Channel turbidites, Foraminifera, submarine canyon turbidites, 2016 Kaikoura Earthquake
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