About This Item

Share This Item

The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

CSPG Special Publications

Abstract


Shelf Sands and Sandstones — Memoir 11, 1986
Pages 340-340
Symposium Abstracts: Storm-Dominated Shelves

Event Deposits in the Bude Formation (Upper Carboniferous, Southwest England) — Turbidites, Tempestites, or Both?: Abstract

Roger Higgs1

Abstract

The Bude Formation consists of at least 1 km of interbedded mudstone, silt-stone and very fine sandstone, showing no obvious cyclicity, deposited in a foreland-basin epeiric sea that embraced much of southwest England. Many of the sandstones are thin (< 30 cm), with sharp bases, grading, and other features indicative of deposition during a single, waning-energy event. Other sandstones are composite units, up to 10 m thick, consisting of amalgamated event deposits. Marine fossils are very scarce, suggesting poor oceanic connections. From the abundance of graded beds showing the vertical sequence “sharp base ± massive texture ± parallel lamination ± asymmetrical ripple cross-lamination”, and the lack of evidence for Previous HitwaveNext Hit activity or subaerial exposure, several workers have concluded that the sandstones were deposited as turbidites beneath storm-Previous HitwaveNext Hit base. However, recent field observations by the author cast doubt, firstly, upon the authenticity of many of the supposed turbidites, and, secondly, upon the validity of the deep-water model, by revealing that most of the ripple cross-lamination in the Bude Formation is of an asymmetrical, Previous HitwaveNext Hit-influenced variety. Furthermore, mud-filled scours and hummocky cross-stratification, typical of Previous HitwaveNext Hit-dominated offshore successions, seem to be common.

It is suggested, therefore, that deposition took place largely above storm-Previous HitwaveNext Hit base. Those event deposits containing hummocky cross-stratification and/or Previous HitwaveNext Hit-influenced ripple cross-lamination are interpreted as tempestites, deposited during storms under the joint influence of sediment-supplying unidirectional currents and Previous HitwaveTop-induced oscillatory flow. Event deposits showing only massive texture and/or parallel lamination could be either tempestites or turbidites, since both of these sedimentary structures can form under unidirectional, oscillatory, and (presumably) combined flows.


 

Acknowledgments and Associated Footnotes

1 Department of Geology and Mineralogy, University of Oxford, Oxford, U.K. OX1 3PR

Copyright © 2008 by the Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists