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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
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Title:
Carbonate
Platform to Relative
Sea
Level
Changes: Broken Ridge, Southeast Indian Ocean (1)
Author(s):
Abstract:
In contrast to terrigenous margins, the stratigraphic response of
carbonate
platforms to relative
sea
level
changes is influenced by
carbonate
productivity, dissolution, and
diagenesis
. Using seismic reflection and Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) drilling data from Broken Ridge, we assess the importance of these processes in controlling the stratigraphic response of a
carbonate
platform to relative
sea
level
changes. Prior to middle Eocene rifting, Broken Ridge and Kerguelen-Heard Plateau constituted a large
carbonate
platform. ODP drilling data from the Kerguelen-Heard Plateau (Leg 120) and Broken Ridge (Leg 121) reveal that the
carbonate
platform had two major episodes of tectonic uplift. The early Maastrichtian uplift was confined to the southern section of the Kerguelen-
eard Plateau (Sites 747, 748) and gently tilted the platform toward the north. The middle Eocene rift-induced uplift affected both Broken Ridge and the northern section of the Kerguelen-Heard Plateau (Sites 752-755).
Watergun seismic reflection and drilling data indicate the following stratigraphic response of the platform to relative
sea
level
changes. (1) Prograding clinoforms consisting of
carbonate
sediments were deposited during a long-term relative
sea
level
rise. Submergence of the uplifted parts of the platform (southern Kerguelen-Heard Plateau) increased the area available for productivity allowing the
carbonate
sediment to prograde northward into the basin during the rise. (2) Onlapping sequences consisting of
carbonate
detritus were deposited in the basin during the middle Eocene relative
sea
level
fall. The
carbonate
strata on Broken Ridge were uplifted to at least wavebase and eroded. The detritus was transported northward toward the basin and onlaps the preexisting strata. The approx
mate volume balance between the sediment eroded from the crest of Broken Ridge and the onlapping sediments deposited along the northern slope suggests that mechanical erosion and transportation of
carbonate
sediment into the deep
sea
were important processes controlling the stratigraphy at Broken Ridge during the relative
sea
level
fall.
We propose that the stratagraphic response of Broken Ridge to the middle Eocene relative
sea
level
fall is consistent with stratigraphic predictions based on terrigenous margins. However, during a relative
sea
level
rise, biogenic
carbonate
production may allow
carbonate
sediment to prograde basinward despite the fact that water depths are increasing. Stratigraphic models based on terrigenous margins do not account for the increase in sediment supply along
carbonate
margins during a relative
sea
level
rise, and thus require minor modification in order to predict the development of the prograding clinoforms.
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