Facies belts of the Middle America Trench and forearc region, southern Mexico: results from Leg 66 DSDP

Abstract
The Middle America Trench SE of Acapulco is flanked by a steep canyon-incised slope and narrow shelf, showing one of a variety of sedimentary facies patterns possible at convergent margins. Piston and drill cores from this region define eight facies belts including: (1) a pelagic facies of brown clay, (2) an outer slope mud facies, (3) a trench sand facies, (4) a foraminiferan-free facies on the lower slope, (5) a foraminiferan-bearing facies on the mid-slope, (6) a laminated mud facies on the upper slope, (7) a shelf facies of sand and mud, and (8) a canyon facies of sand and gravel. The superposition of trench and lower slope sediment during accretion results in a fining upward sequence reflecting a gradual uplift of the seafloor through the trench sediment-plume. The lower limit of the foraminiferan-bearing facies is defined by the absence of in situ calcareous foraminiferans and is controlled by the calcite compensation depth. The upper slope laminated mud facies probably reflects the depth range of the oxygen minimum zone.