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Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 30, No. 8, April 1988. Pages 9-9.

Abstract: Facies Models, Depositional Systems, Sequences, and Correlation: Dimensional and Temporal Resolution of Lithostratigraphy

By

William E. Galloway

Basin fills consist of a hierarchal assemblage of genetic stratigraphic units that are bounded by or contain correlative stratigraphic surfaces, facies, or marker beds. Because most basins are filled episodically, regional stratigraphic units defined by hiatal surfaces provide fundamental elements for correlation and analysis. Depositional sequence analysis emphasizes the importance of erosional unconformities produced by fluctuating sea level. In contrast, the concept of depositional episodes and resultant depositional complexes (genetic sequences) emphasizes the stratigraphic importance of transgressions and subsequent hiatal surfaces or condensed intervals resulting from the interplay of sediment supply, subsidence, and base-level change. The two models suggest organized but somewhat different stratigraphic architectures and correlation of surfaces within the depositional framework. Correlation of sequences extends regionally within basins, and may encompass several basins, depending upon causal mechanism. Resolution is on the order of 106 years.

Each sequence typically contains the deposits of several depositional systems, which provide the three-dimensional building blocks of the basin fill. Major integrated depositional systems, in turn, consist of process-related facies assemblages deposited in more localized environments. Deposition within systems and their constituent environments is commonly punctuated by a series of depositional events. Such events may provide a relatively high resolution temporal framework, but extent of obvious correlatability is commonly limited to adjacent facies or to a single system. Causal mechanisms may be classified as (1) intrinsic, (2) tectonic/geomorphic, (3) climatic, and (4) eustatic.

Intrinsic mechanisms are autocyclic and include alternating channel incision and backfilling, channel avulsion, and delta/fan lobe switching. Time scales are on the order of 103 years. Tectonic/geomorphic events include tectonic triggering of large-scale gravity resedimentation, volcanism, and recurrent channel piracy. Time scales are more variable, but likely extend from 102 to 104 years. Climatic mechanisms include induced changes in runoff and sediment supply as well as periodic storm events. Suggested periods of climatic cycles range from 104 to 105 years. Storm events are more frequent but erratic, and stratigraphic resolution may be limited by physical correlatability of resultant beds or surfaces. Finally, eustatic "wobbles" may result in widely correlative shoreline shifts. However, correlation is complicated by the complex response of shorelines to modest base level changes and by the interplay of other variables.

Given the multiplicity of potentially correlative physical stratigraphic features, it is commonly possible to develop a highly detailed correlation framework. However, some depositional systems are more favorable for internal correlation, and areal extent of specific, event-defined stratal surfaces is likely limited to or within a single system. Perceptive analysis of contiguous systems may uncover logical coupling of events. For example, lobe switching within a large delta system may result in reduced sediment supply and transgression in an adjacent, strike-fed shore-zone system as well as in excavation of an integrated submarine canyon complex. Thus autocyclic processes acting within a delta system may precipitate approximately contemporaneous events within adjacent shallow and deep water settings.

Correlation is highly interpretive. Correlations should always be tested against alternative hypotheses, including the hypothesis that physically correlative surfaces or strata do not exist. Further, correlations should be supportable in the context of the depositional process models applicable to the system(s) under analysis.

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