Liquefied flows (also known as liquified flows and fluidized flows) are types of
sediment-gravity flows
upright=1.25, This Devonian.html" ;"title="turbidite from the Devonian">turbidite from the Devonian Becke-Oese Sandstone of Germany is an example of a deposit from a sediment gravity flow. Note the complete Bouma sequence.
A sediment gravity flo ...
in which grains within the flow are kept in suspension by the upward movement of fluid. They form in granular substances where the concentration of suspended mud is too low to develop cohesive forces within the flow. As grains at the base of the suspension settle out, fluid that is displaced upward by the settling generates pore fluid pressures that can help suspend grains in the upper part of the flow. Application of an external pressure to the suspension will initiate flow. This external pressure can be applied by a seismic shock, which may turn transform loose sand into a highly viscous suspension as in quicksand. Generally as soon as the flow begins to move, fluid turbulence results and the flow rapidly evolves into a
turbidity current. Flows and suspensions are said to be liquefied when the grains settle downward through the fluid and displace the fluid upwards. By contrast, flows and suspensions are said to fluidized when the fluid moves upward through the grains, thereby temporarily suspending them. Most flows are liquefied, and many references to fluidized sediment gravity flows are in fact incorrect and actually refer to liquified flows. Because fluid is displaced upward in these types of flows, dewatering features such as
dish structures A dish structure is a type of sedimentary structure formed by liquefaction and fluidization of water-charged soft sediment either during or immediately following deposition.
Terminology
Due to the similarity in its shape to a dish, the structure ...
, pillars, pipes and dikes are common.
[ Lowe, D.R. (1982), ''Sediment gravity flows: II. Depositional models with special reference to the deposits of high-density turbidity currents,'' Journal of Sedimentology, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, v. 52, p. 279-297.]
Notes and references
Sedimentology
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