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Colossal underwater canyon discovered in the Mediterran­ean Sea

- WORDS SACHA PARE

Scientists have discovered a giant underwater canyon in the eastern Mediterran­ean Sea that likely formed just before the sea transforme­d into a mile-high salt field. The canyon formed around 6 million years ago at the onset of the Messinian salinity crisis (MSC), when the Gibraltar gateway between the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterran­ean Sea narrowed and eventually pinched shut due to shifts in tectonic plates. The Mediterran­ean Sea became isolated from the world’s oceans and dried up for roughly 700,000 years, leaving behind a vast expanse of salt up to two miles thick in some places.

As sea levels dropped, increasing­ly salty currents eroded the seabed and incised gullies several hundred metres deep along the steepest edges of the Mediterran­ean Sea. In a new study, researcher­s describe a giant U-shaped canyon located 75 miles south of Cyprus, in the depths of the Mediterran­ean’s Levant Basin. The 500-metre-deep and 6.2-mile-wide canyon, which the researcher­s named after the nearby Eratosthen­es seamount, likely formed underwater shortly before salt piled onto the seabed. Unlike the more coastal gullies, the canyon had no older ‘pre-salt’ roots. “To explain the submarine formation of the Eratosthen­es Canyon, we suggest incision by dense gravity currents scratching and carving the deep-water seafloor,” the researcher­s wrote in the study. Weighed down with salt and sediment, these currents rushed along faster than the surroundin­g water and gradually scooped out enough of the seabed to form the colossal canyon. Precisely when this occurred remains unclear, but it likely coincided with the beginning of the MSC, between 5.6 million and 6 million years ago.

The incision process may have lasted anywhere from tens of thousands to half a million years. The discovery sheds light on a decades-long debate over whether Messinian gullies and canyons that now lie underwater formed above or below the sea surface. “This new evidence strengthen­s the arguments that at least part of the erosion across continenta­l margins occurred [below water],” the researcher­s wrote.

The newly discovered canyon sits within a wider network of canyons and channels in an area known as the Levant Basin, which extends from the coast of Syria in the north to Gaza in the south, and northwest towards Cyprus. To the northwest of the canyon, beyond the Eratosthen­es Seamount, sits the much deeper and older Herodotus Basin, which receives currents loaded with sediment from the southeast. These currents may have crossed the area that now boasts the Eratosthen­es Canyon long before it was incised. “The absence of older roots under the Eratosthen­es Canyon does not rule out the possibilit­y that a shallow pre-msc channel system predated the Eratosthen­es Canyon,” the researcher­s wrote.

“The canyon formed around 6 million years ago”

 ?? ?? A newly discovered underwater canyon was carved out of the seabed by extremely salty currents
A newly discovered underwater canyon was carved out of the seabed by extremely salty currents

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