Sara Lafuerza
University of Barcelona
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Sara Lafuerza.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2012
Michael Manga; Matthew J. Hornbach; Anne Le Friant; Osamu Ishizuka; Nicole A. Stroncik; Tatsuya Adachi; Mohammed Aljahdali; Georges Boudon; Christoph Breitkreuz; Andrew Fraass; Akihiko Fujinawa; Robert G. Hatfield; Martin Jutzeler; Kyoko S. Kataoka; Sara Lafuerza; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Martinez-Colon; Molly McCanta; Sally Morgan; Martin R. Palmer; Takeshi Saito; Angela L. Slagle; Adam J. Stinton; K. S. V. Subramanyam; Yoshihiko Tamura; Peter J. Talling; Benoît Villemant; Deborah Wall-Palmer; Fei Wang
Using temperature gradients measured in 10 holes at 6 sites, we generate the first high fidelity heat flow measurements from Integrated Ocean Drilling Program drill holes across the northern and central Lesser Antilles arc and back arc Grenada basin. The implied heat flow, after correcting for bathymetry and sedimentation effects, ranges from about 0.1 W/m2 on the crest of the arc, midway between the volcanic islands of Montserrat and Guadeloupe, to 15 km from the crest in the back arc direction. Combined with previous measurements, we find that the magnitude and spatial pattern of heat flow are similar to those at continental arcs. The heat flow in the Grenada basin to the west of the active arc is 0.06 W/m2, a factor of 2 lower than that found in the previous and most recent study. There is no thermal evidence for significant shallow fluid advection at any of these sites. Present-day volcanism is confined to the region with the highest heat flow.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2008
Maria-Angela Bassetti; Serge Berné; Gwenael Jouet; M Taviani; Bernard Dennielou; José-Abel Flores; Arnaud Gaillot; R Gelfort; Sara Lafuerza; Nabil Sultan
Thick forced regressive units on the wide continental shelf of the Gulf of Lions (western Mediterranean) recorded the composite effect of sea level changes during the Quaternary. They are mostly composed of coastal siliciclastic and bioclastic wedges showing clinoform geometry. These deposits have been intensively explored through high-resolution seismic investigations, but only recently it was possible to ground truth seismic interpretations, based on a long (100 m) borehole that crossed the succession and recovered a large part of the mainly sandy deposits (similar to 84% recovery). A multiproxy analysis of the sedimentary succession shows that (1) the stratal architecture of the shelf margin is defined by major bounding surfaces that are polygenic erosion surfaces associated with coarse-grained material incorporating abundant and diverse shells, including cold-water fauna (presently absent from the Mediterranean Sea). Between each surface, coarsening upward units with steep (up to 5 degrees) foresets are made of massive (more than 20 m thick) sands with possible swaley and hummocky cross-stratification, passing seaward to sands with muddy intervals and, further offshore, alternating highly boiturbated sands and silts. Each prograding wedge corresponds to a forced-regressive shoreface (or delta front/prodelta), deposited during the overall sea level falls occurring at (relatively slow) interglacial/glacial transition and therefore represents the record of 100 ka cyclicity. Higher-frequency Milankovitch cyclicities are also probably represented by distinct shoreface/delta front wedges; (2) detailed examination of the architecture and chronostratigraphy of the most recent sequence shows that minor bounding surfaces, corresponding to abrupt shallowing of sedimentary facies, separate downward stepping parasequences within the last 100 ka sequence...
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2008
Sara Lafuerza; J. Frigola; M. Canals; Gwenael Jouet; Maria-Angela Bassetti; Nabil Sultan; Serge Berné
We show the results provided by piezocone tests in determining the stratigraphic profile and the soil classification of two drilling sites in the outer shelf and the upper slope of the Gulf of Lion, PRGL2 and PRGL1, respectively. Correlations with grain-size data indicate that sleeve friction can be used for profiling fine-grained sediments (site PRGL1), whereas cone tip resistance is the most adequate for sequences made of alternations of coarse- and fine-grained intervals (site PRGL2). Normalized cone resistance and friction ratio proved to be also appropriate for soil stratigraphy as it depicts trends in the coarse fraction of the tested soil. Silts and clays present in similar proportions at site PRGL1 responded to piezocone testing as pure clays usually do. Consequently, classical soil classification methods resulted in erroneous interpretation of these sediments as clays, whereas classification of the heterogeneous deposits at PRGL2 was consistent with the grain size. When tied to a high-resolution seismic reflection profile, the stratigraphy interpreted from the piezocone profile matches with the main seismic sequences and discontinuities defined from seismic stratigraphy analysis. Graded bedding also matches with cone tip resistance and sleeve friction data.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007
Nabil Sultan; Matthieu Gaudin; Serge Berné; Miquel Canals; Roger Urgeles; Sara Lafuerza
To improve understanding of evolution of submarine canyons, a three-dimensional slope-stability model is applied to Bourcart Canyon in the western Gulf of Lions in the Mediterranean Sea. The model builds on previous work by Chen and others, and it uses the upper bound theorem of plasticity to calculate the factor of safety of a kinematically admissible failing mass. Examples of three-dimensional failure surfaces documented in the literature were used to test the model formulation. Model application to Bourcart Canyon employed the results of a detailed stratigraphic analyses based on data acquired by swath bathymetry, sub-bottom profiling, high-resolution seismic reflection surveys, and piston coring. The sediment layers were also characterized using in-situ geotechnical measurements and laboratory tests. The effects of three loading scenarios were analyzed: (1) earthquake shaking, (2) hemipelagic sedimentation, and (3) axial incision. These three mechanisms influenced the predicted volumes and shapes of slope failures along the flanks of Bourcart Canyon, and comparison of these predictions with failure geometries inferred from seafloor morphology showed that mass failures could account for the observed morphology along the canyon walls as well as a mechanism of canyon widening
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007
Roger Urgeles; Ben De Mol; Camino Liquete; Miquel Canals; Marc De Batist; John E. Hughes-Clarke; David Amblas; Pedro Arnau; Antoni Calafat; J.L. Casamor; Victor Centella; Koen De Rycker; Joan Fabres; Jaime Frigola; Sara Lafuerza; Galderic Lastras; Anna Sanchez; D. Zúñiga; Willem Versteeg; Veronica Willmott
A field of sediment undulations has been mapped by means of high resolution multibeam bathymetry and seismic reflection profiles in the Llobregat River prodelta, off the city of Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Similar features had previously been recognized in other prodelta environments and interpreted either as downslope sediment deformation or sedimentary structures induced by bottom currents or hyperpycnal flows. Since the study area is undergoing significant offshore development, proper interpretation of such sediment undulations is needed for a correct risk assessment. The occurrence of the sedi- ment undulations is restricted to the prodelta front on slope gradients between 3 and 0.2o. The undulations have developed at the edge and atop an area of gas bearing sediments within the Late-Holocene high-stand mud wedge. An evaluation is made of the character- istics of the sediment undulations in order to determine the most likely process for the origin of these structures. Amongst these characteristics are the continuity of the reflec- tions and lack of diffractions in between different undulations, their size distribution (large to small) both from shallow to deep and with depth in section, the asymmetry (de- creasing from proximal to distal), the crest to trough vertical distance on the landward side of the undulations (up to 0.5 m), and the lack of features that could indicate a pro- gressive movement such as growth structures and drag folds. These characteristics indi- cate that the sediment undulations on the Llobregat River prodelta do not result from sediment deformation, but rather from the interaction of bottom currents generated by hyperpycnal flows from the Llobregat River with regional sea water circulation. Their identification as sediment waves implies that such features do not pose a major hazard for further offshore development.
Science & Engineering Faculty | 2015
A. Le Friant; Osamu Ishizuka; Georges Boudon; Martin R. Palmer; Peter J. Talling; B. Villemant; Tatsuya Adachi; Mohammed Aljahdali; Christoph Breitkreuz; Morgane Brunet; Benoit Caron; Maya Coussens; Christine Deplus; Daisuke Endo; Nathalie Feuillet; A.J. Fraas; Akihiko Fujinawa; Malcolm B. Hart; Robert G. Hatfield; Matt Hornbach; Martin Jutzeler; Kyoko S. Kataoka; J-C. Komorowski; Elodie Lebas; Sara Lafuerza; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Manga; Michael Martinez-Colon; Molly McCanta; Sally Morgan
IODP Expedition 340 successfully drilled a series of sites offshore Montserrat, Martinique and Dominica in the Lesser Antilles from March to April 2012. These are among the few drill sites gathered around volcanic islands, and the first scientific drilling of large and likely tsunamigenic volcanic island-arc landslide deposits. These cores provide evidence and tests of previous hypotheses for the composition and origin of those deposits. Sites U1394, U1399, and U1400 that penetrated landslide deposits recovered exclusively seafloor sediment, comprising mainly turbidites and hemipelagic deposits, and lacked debris avalanche deposits. This supports the concepts that i/ volcanic debris avalanches tend to stop at the slope break, and ii/ widespread and voluminous failures of preexisting low-gradient seafloor sediment can be triggered by initial emplacement of material from the volcano. Offshore Martinique (U1399 and 1400), the landslide deposits comprised blocks of parallel strata that were tilted or microfaulted, sometimes separated by intervals of homogenized sediment (intense shearing), while Site U1394 offshore Montserrat penetrated a flat-lying block of intact strata. The most likely mechanism for generating these large-scale seafloor sediment failures appears to be propagation of a decollement from proximal areas loaded and incised by a volcanic debris avalanche. These results have implications for the magnitude of tsunami generation. Under some conditions, volcanic island landslide deposits composed of mainly seafloor sediment will tend to form smaller magnitude tsunamis than equivalent volumes of subaerial block-rich mass flows rapidly entering water. Expedition 340 also successfully drilled sites to access the undisturbed record of eruption fallout layers intercalated with marine sediment which provide an outstanding high-resolution data set to analyze eruption and landslides cycles, improve understanding of magmatic evolution as well as offshore sedimentation processes.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2014
Deborah Wall-Palmer; Maya Coussens; Peter J. Talling; Martin Jutzeler; Michael Cassidy; Isabelle Marchant; Martin R. Palmer; S.F.L. Watt; Christopher W. Smart; Jodie K. Fisher; Malcolm B. Hart; Andrew Fraass; J. Trofimovs; Anne Le Friant; Osamu Ishizuka; Tatsuya Adachi; Mohammed Aljahdali; Georges Boudon; Christoph Breitkreuz; Daisuke Endo; Akihiko Fujinawa; Robert G. Hatfield; Matthew J. Hornbach; Kyoko S. Kataoka; Sara Lafuerza; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Manga; Michael Martinez-Colon; Molly McCanta; Sally Morgan
Marine sediments around volcanic islands contain an archive of volcaniclastic deposits, which can be used to reconstruct the volcanic history of an area. Such records hold many advantages over often incomplete terrestrial data sets. This includes the potential for precise and continuous dating of intervening sediment packages, which allow a correlatable and temporally constrained stratigraphic framework to be constructed across multiple marine sediment cores. Here we discuss a marine record of eruptive and mass-wasting events spanning ∼250 ka offshore of Montserrat, using new data from IODP Expedition 340, as well as previously collected cores. By using a combination of high-resolution oxygen isotope stratigraphy, AMS radiocarbon dating, biostratigraphy of foraminifera and calcareous nannofossils, and clast componentry, we identify five major events at Soufriere Hills volcano since 250 ka. Lateral correlations of these events across sediment cores collected offshore of the south and south west of Montserrat have improved our understanding of the timing, extent and associations between events in this area. Correlations reveal that powerful and potentially erosive density-currents traveled at least 33 km offshore and demonstrate that marine deposits, produced by eruption-fed and mass-wasting events on volcanic islands, are heterogeneous in their spatial distribution. Thus, multiple drilling/coring sites are needed to reconstruct the full chronostratigraphy of volcanic islands. This multidisciplinary study will be vital to interpreting the chaotic records of submarine landslides at other sites drilled during Expedition 340 and provides a framework that can be applied to the stratigraphic analysis of sediments surrounding other volcanic islands.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2016
Morgane Brunet; Anne Le Friant; Georges Boudon; Sara Lafuerza; Peter J. Talling; Matthew J. Hornbach; Osamu Ishizuka; Elodie Lebas; Hervé Guyard
Landslides are common features in the vicinity of volcanic islands. In this contribution, we investigate landslides emplacement and dynamics around the volcanic island of Martinique based on the first scientific drilling of such deposits. The evolution of the active Montagne Pelee volcano on this island has been marked by three major flank-collapses that removed much of the western flank of the volcano. Subaerial collapse volumes vary from 2 to 25 km3 and debris avalanches flowed into the Grenada Basin. High-resolution seismic data (AGUADOMAR-1999, CARAVAL-2002, and GWADASEIS-2009) is combined with new drill cores that penetrate up to 430 m through the three submarine landslide deposits previously associated to the aerial flank-collapses (Site U1399, Site U1400, Site U1401, IODP Expedition 340, Joides Resolution, March–April 2012). This combined geophysical and core data provide an improved understanding of landslide processes offshore a volcanic island. The integrated analysis shows a large submarine landslide deposit, without debris avalanche deposits coming from the volcano, comprising up to 300 km3 of remobilized seafloor sediment that extends for 70 km away from the coast and covers an area of 2100 km2. Our new data suggest that the aerial debris avalanche deposit enter the sea but stop at the base of submarine flank. We propose a new model dealing with seafloor sediment failures and landslide propagation mechanisms, triggered by volcanic flank-collapse events affecting Montagne Pelee volcano. Newly recognized landslide deposits occur deeper in the stratigraphy, suggesting the recurrence of large-scale mass-wasting processes offshore the island and thus, the necessity to better assess the associated tsunami hazards in the region.
Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2013
Galderic Lastras; David Amblas; Antoni Calafat; Miquel Canals; Jaime Frigola; Reginald L. Hermanns; Sara Lafuerza; Oddvar Longva; Aaron Micallef; Sergio A. Sepúlveda; Gabriel Vargas; Marc De Batist; Maarten Van Daele; María Azpiroz; Ignacio Bascuñán; Paul Duhart; Olaia Iglesias; Philipp Kempf; Xavier Rayo
On 21 April 2007, an Mw 6.2 earthquake produced an unforeseen chain of events in the Aysen fjord (Chilean Patagonia, 45.5°S). The earthquake triggered hundreds of subaerial landslides along the fjord flanks. Some of the landslides eventually involved a subaqueous component that, in turn, generated a series of displacement waves—tsunami-like waves produced by the fast entry of a subaerial landmass into a water body—within the fjord [Naranjo et al., 2009; Sepulveda and Serey, 2009; Hermanns et al., 2013]. These waves, with run-ups several meters high along the shoreline, caused 10 fatalities. In addition, they severely damaged salmon farms, which constitute the main economic activity in the region, setting free millions of cultivated salmon with still unknown ecological consequences.
Archive | 2014
Sara Lafuerza; Anne Le Friant; Michael Manga; Georges Boudon; Benoît Villemant; Nicole A. Stroncik; Barry Voight; Matt Hornbach; Osamu Ishizuka
Onshore-offshore geophysical studies conducted on Martinique have identified major flank collapse events of Montagne Pelee that generated large submarine mass wasting deposits. Here, we evaluate the preconditioning factors involved in the deformation and failure of marine sediments related to volcano-flank collapse events. We use core logging, sedimentological and geotechnical data of the upper 200 m of core at sites U1397, U1398, U1399 and U1400 drilled during the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) expedition 340, west of Martinique. We find that the low hydraulic conductivity of hemipelagic sediment causes low rates of dewatering of turbidites and tephra layers allowing excess pore fluid pressures to persist at depth. Overpressure generation was likely enhanced during major flank collapses, leading to low shear strength and subsequent deformation of large volumes of marine sediments, as found at Site U1400.
Collaboration
Dive into the Sara Lafuerza's collaboration.
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputs