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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 18, No. 4, December 1975. Pages 2-2.

Abstract: Grainstones and Types of Carbonate Shelf Cycles

By

James Previous HitLeeTop Wilson

Carbonate shelf and shelf margin strata commonly consist of hemicyclic deposits following three upward shoaling patterns: (1) a shelf to shelf margin sequence containing a prominent grainstone unit capped either by a hard ground or by a thin restricted-marine peloidal micrite unit, (2) shelf interior low energy sequences with almost all phases of the cycle highly micritic, or (3) a cycle common in well-drained offshore banks and margins of large platforms, containing a major unit of peloids, onkoids, and grapestones and showing considerable syndepositional diagenesis by marine splash zone and/or vadose meteoric waters.

Jurassic and Mississippian strata of Europe, Arabia, Gulf of Mexico, and the northern Rockies all contain cycles with well developed oolitic grainstone. Such strata are developed at shelf margins, but also in places uniformly across wide shelves indicating either extremely high tidal ranges or deposition under continuous widespread progradation. The latter process seems more reasonable.

The coincidence of wide shelves and evaporitic climate offers a possible explanation for the reciprocal relationship between reefs and oolite both geographically and in the geologic record. Oolite appears to form best when tidal and wind induced currents on bank and platform edges are not inhibited by abundant organic buildups. The latter are prevented by seaward flow of hypersaline or nutrient depleted water from off wide shelves or by lack of frame building corals and stromatoporoids in certain parts of the geologic record.

Porosity in oolitic grainstone is controlled by the amount and timing of early marine, isopachous, drusy cementation, the degree of solution-compaction at early diagenetic stages and the effectiveness of common second generation cementation of blocky ferroan calcite. Variability in the amount of repeated early subaerial exposure as well as the amount of much later groundwater movement offer critical controls on grain solution and precipitation of these cements.

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