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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Variations in Deltaic Cycles
By
Several hundred thousand cubic miles of Gulf Coast
Tertiary sediments have been deposited in a deltaic setting.
Published literature attributes sedimentary sequences ranging
from a few thousand feet to only several feet in thickness
to delta sedimentation. Are such highly variable sequences
the result of delta deposition and, if so, what factors control
such spatial and temporal scales? Basin tectonics, climatic
changes, long-term relative sea-level patterns, eustatic sea-level
changes, regional and local variations in subsidence
rates, changes in basin drainage areas, variations in basinal
marine climates, and numerous other similar factors all play
a major role in controlling the spatial magnitude of deposits
interpreted to be deltaic in nature. In modern or relatively
young deposits, recognition of these process controls is
sometimes possible, but in older (Tertiary) sequences such
factors as lack of precise chronostratigraphic control, poor
knowledge of quantitative faunal and sedimentary characteristics
of a large number of deltaic environments, relatively
meager understanding of past environmental conditions
and regional depositional patterns, etc., add extreme complexity
to
basic
recognition of variable delta cycles.
One of the major characteristics of deltaic sedimentation is cyclicity displayed at various temporal and spatial scales. Periodicity of the delta cycles recorded in the sediments at any one vertical site ranges from only a few years to several million years, with corresponding thicknesses from a few tens of feet to several thousand feet. Such nested frequencies and lack of criteria to recognize them make it extremely difficult to develop consistent terminology. A 2000-foot, well-developed coarsening upward sequence commencing with marine shales and capped by in situ terrestrial organic deposits can be described as a delta cycle beginning with deposition of prodelta shales, grading upward into alternating sandstones and siltstones of the delta front, to sandstones of the distributary mouth bar, and capped by delta plain deposits. In other instances, a 20-foot cored section containing a marine shale at the base, coarsening upward to a sandstone, and capped by in situ organic deposits has had similar terminology applied to the various facies. Both sequences may be the direct result of sediment being deposited directly from a river system, but the temporal and spatial scales of the sedimentary units, lateral continuity of units, and processes of deposition were probably quite different.
Relatively thick, coarsening upward sequences can
result from long-term changes in basin tectonics, regional
climatic changes and relative sea level changes, whereas
delta cycles on the order of 100 feet thick often result from
high frequency eustatic sea level changes, variations in
regional rates of subsidence, and alongshore and on/offshore
shifting sites of deposition. Very thin delta cycles (a
few feet thick) result from short-term hydraulic variations,
catastrophic events and localized sediment loading patterns.
Some of the
basic
processes that control such variations in
delta cycles and some of the resulting characteristics of the
deposits will be discussed and illustrated.
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