Formation
These deposits form from cohesive, gravity-driven flows where the sediment behaves plastically due to high sediment concentration and pore pressure. Movement occurs en masse, often triggered by slope failure, rapid melt-out, or sediment loading on subaqueous slopes. The lack of sorting and internal structures reflects the low turbulence and laminar nature of these flows.
Significance
Debris flows record rapid downslope movement and are indicators of slope instability in glacial, paraglacial, or delta-front settings. Their internal character and matrix texture provide clues to flow rheology and depositional conditions. Clast size, abundance, and organization can be used to infer flow distance, strength, and source proximity.

Formation
Turbidity currents form when sediment suspensions are triggered and move downslope under gravity, commonly due to slope failure or delta-front collapse. As energy decreases, coarse grains settle first, followed by progressively finer sediments. In hybrid flows, cohesive lower parts transition to turbulent flow regimes, depositing a stacked sequence of contrasting structures.
Significance
These flows provide insight into the energy evolution of mass transport processes. Bouma-like divisions allow for interpretation of flow strength, duration, and sediment concentration, while hybrid beds reveal complex rheological behavior. These deposits are useful for interpreting channelized flows, basin-margin environments, and sediment remobilization processes in proglacial and slope systems.
Formation
These structures form on inclined surfaces where oversteepened, saturated sediments become gravitationally unstable. Initial movement may involve shear at discrete planes, followed by folding, tilting, and internal deformation as the slump progresses. They are commonly triggered by rapid sedimentation, loading, or seismic disturbance in shallow subaqueous environments.
Significance
Slumps and slides mark the early stages of mass transport and can grade into debris flows downslope. Their presence indicates dynamic slope conditions and helps reconstruct past sedimentation rates, slope gradients, and paleoseismic events. Recognizing these features is key for identifying sediment instability in glaciolacustrine, deltaic, or fjord settings.
Formation
Deformation arises from shear stress, loading, or rapid pore pressure changes during flow initiation or passage. Sediment beneath the flow may liquefy, deform, or be injected into overlying layers. These processes often reflect local overpressure, rapid deposition, or shear at flow bases.
Significance
These structures record moments of flow instability and the interaction between moving and stationary sediment. They help distinguish between depositional and post-depositional deformation and are essential for identifying mass flow boundaries, basal process regimes, and zones of sediment remobilization within slope and glaciogenic environments.