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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Journal of Sedimentary Research (SEPM)

Abstract


Journal of Sedimentary Research
Vol. 83 (2013), No. 8. (August), Pages 669-690
Research Articles

Geochemical Correlation in an Exhumed Submarine Channel Complex (Tabernas Basin, SE Spain): Comparison to Sedimentological Correlation at Various Length Scales

Michaela Aehnelt, Richard H. Worden, Andrew C. Canham, Stephen J. Hill, David M. Hodgson, Stephen S. Flint

Abstract

Whole-rock, inorganic, geochemical data have previously been used to aid characterization and stratigraphic correlation of fossil-poor clastic sedimentary deposits, although this approach has not yet been calibrated by testing chemostratigraphic correlations against physical stratigraphic correlations from outcrop. Chemical data from a well-exposed siliciclastic succession in a Tortonian (late Miocene) submarine slope channel system in the Tabernas Basin of southern Spain were generated using X-ray fluorescence supplemented by X-ray diffraction, SEM analysis, and light microscopy. Amongst the > 60 elements measured, nearly a quarter of them have proved to be useful or reliable for geochemically based correlation at the tested scales (∼ 10 m, ∼ 50 m, ∼ 100 m). These elements are SiO2, K2O, Al2O3, CaO, and TiO2, as well as Zr, Nb, Th, Rb, Cs, As, and the rare earth elements, La, Nd, and Ce. High-resolution, bed-to-bed geochemical correlation is feasible over short distances (∼ 10 m). Geochemical data from sections in beds that are traceable suggest that a given stratigraphic level seems to be geochemically homogeneous with respect to some key elements. Geochemical data also provide a useful aid for high-resolution sedimentary correlation, at distances of several tens of meters up to at least 100 m. Since each individual bed seems to be broadly homogeneous in composition, at a larger scale it is possible to discern a provenance signal in geochemical data. Chemical stratigraphy thus seems to work even in stratigraphically complicated submarine channel complexes.


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