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Post Info TOPIC: Messinian flood


L

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RE: Messinian flood
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Así era el margen del Ebro hace seis millones de años

Un equipo de investigación español, gracias a la tecnología sísmica de reflexión 3D, ha logrado por primera vez cartografiar los elementos geomorfológicos de la cuenca de hace entre 5 y 6 millones de años. Las imágenes obtenidas demuestran que la superficie analizada se encuentra en la actualidad a 2,5 o 3 kilómetros de profundidad bajo el fondo marino.
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The fall in sea level during the Messinian in this part of the Mediterranean basin was about 1,300 meters. Credit: SINC / ICM.


The Ebro is one of the most important rivers in the Iberian Peninsula. It is the biggest river by discharge volume in Spain.
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Zanclean flood
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Title: Catastrophic flood of the Mediterranean after the Messinian salinity crisis
Authors: D. Garcia-Castellanos, F. Estrada, I. Jiménez-Munt, C. Gorini, M. Fernàndez, J. Vergés & R. De Vicente

The Mediterranean Sea became disconnected from the world's oceans and mostly desiccated by evaporation about 5.6 million years ago during the Messinian salinity crisis. The Atlantic waters found a way through the present Gibraltar Strait and rapidly refilled the Mediterranean 5.33 million years ago in an event known as the Zanclean flood. The nature, abruptness and evolution of this flood remain poorly constrained. Borehole and seismic data show incisions over 250 m deep on both sides of the Gibraltar Strait that have previously been attributed to fluvial erosion during the desiccation. Here we show the continuity of this 200-km-long channel across the strait and explain its morphology as the result of erosion by the flooding waters, adopting an incision model validated in mountain rivers. This model in turn allows us to estimate the duration of the flood. Although the available data are limited, our findings suggest that the feedback between water flow and incision in the early stages of flooding imply discharges of about 10^8 m^3 s^-1 (three orders of magnitude larger than the present Amazon River) and incision rates above 0.4 m per day. Although the flood started at low water discharges that may have lasted for up to several thousand years, our results suggest that 90 per cent of the water was transferred in a short period ranging from a few months to two years. This extremely abrupt flood may have involved peak rates of sea level rise in the Mediterranean of more than ten metres per day.

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RE: Messinian flood
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The Mediterranean Sea was mostly filled in less than two years in a dramatic flood about 5.33 million years ago in which water poured in from the Atlantic, a study has found.
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Ancient Mediterranean flood mystery solved
Research reveals details of a catastrophic flood that refilled the Mediterranean Sea more than five million years ago.

Research has revealed details of the catastrophic Zanclean flood that refilled the Mediterranean Sea more than five million years ago.
The flood occurred when Atlantic waters found their way into the cut-off and desiccated Mediterranean basin.

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