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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Journal of Sedimentary Research (SEPM)

Abstract


Journal of Sedimentary Research
Vol. 81 (2011), No. 8. (August), Pages 562-578
Research Articles: Modeling Shoreface Parasequences

Characterization of Controls on High-Resolution Stratigraphic Architecture in Previous HitWaveNext Hit-Dominated Shoreface–Shelf Parasequences Using Inverse Numerical Modeling

Karl Charvin, Gary J. Hampson, Kerry L. Gallagher, Joep E. A. Storms, Richard Labourdette

Abstract

A new inverse numerical modeling method is Previous HitusedNext Hit to constrain the environmental parameters (e.g., relative-sea-level, sediment-supply, and Previous HitwaveNext Hit climate histories) that control stratigraphic architecture in Previous HitwaveNext Hit-dominated shallow-marine deposits. The method links a “process-response” forward stratigraphic model that simulates Previous HitwaveNext Hit and storm processes (BARSIM) to a combination of inverse methods formulated in a Bayesian framework that allows full characterization of uncertainties. This method is applied for the first time to a real geologic dataset, collected at outcrop from two shoreface–shelf parasequences in the Aberdeen Member, Blackhawk Formation of the Book Cliffs, east-central Utah, USA. The environmental parameters that controlled the observed stratigraphic architecture are quantified, and key aspects of stratigraphic architecture are successfully predicted from limited data. Stratigraphic architecture at parasequence-stacking and intra-parasequence scales was driven principally by relative sea level (varying by up to about 55 m) and sediment supply (varying by up to 70 m2/yr), whose interplay determines the shoreline trajectory. Within zones of distinctive shoreline trajectory, variations in Previous HitwaveNext Hit climate (of up to about 3 m in fairweather-Previous HitwaveTop height) controlled superimposed variations in sandstone and shale content (e.g., the development of upward-coarsening and upward-fining bedsets). The modeling results closely match the observed stratigraphic architecture, but their quality is limited by: (1) the formulation and assumptions of the forward-modeling algorithms, and (2) the observed data distribution and quality, which provide poor age constraint.


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