V. Lykousis, Subaqueous bedforms on the Cyclades Plateau (NE Mediterranean) - evidence of Cretan Deep Water Formation?, CONT SHELF, 21(5), 2001, pp. 495-507
Sandy bedforms are surveyed on the northern-northeastern Cyclades Plateau u
sing side-scan sonar and 3.5 kHz continuous subbottom profiling system. The
bedforms appear in water depths of 80-130 m, as; (a) dunes (3-D megaripple
s; wavelength 10-35 m and height 1-2 m), composed of moderately well-sorted
coarse sand; (b) large to very large sand waves (wavelength 50-300 m and h
eight 1.5-6 m) developed usually in fine-medium sand; (c) 2-D megaripples (
wavelength 3-5 m and height 0.2-0.4 m); (d) narrow sand ribbons (thin erosi
onal lineations); and (e) elongate sand patches, together with those of dif
ferent configurations. The presence of these bedforms implies strong near-b
ed flow, of the order of 40-100 cm/s; and, locally, in the case of sand rib
bons, up to 200 cm/s. Short-period (15 day) deployments of near-bed current
meters did not observe such values; maximum and mean velocities were 10-15
and 6-7 cm/s, respectively. Indirect evidence, provided by the local fishe
rmen, is indicative of strong currents. Dense water mass formation, during
cold winters, is considered to be responsible for the development of these
bedforms. During seasonal cooling, such waters sink rapidly and flow toward
s the south, flooding the deeper part of Cretan Basin (Cretan Deep Water (C
DW) formation); they overflow the Cretan Straits and are dispersed into the
Eastern Mediterranean. Sites for this formation of CDW are considered to b
e the Cyclades Plateau and possibly the North and the Central Aegean Sea. (
C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.