Sedimentary architecture and depositional controls of a Pliocene river-dominated delta in the semi-isolated Dacian Basin, Black Sea

Publication date

2018-06

Authors

Jorissen, E. L.ISNI 000000050601390X
de Leeuw, ArjanISNI 0000000393255821
van Baak, Christian G.C.ISNI 0000000393653627
Mandic, Oleg
Stoica, MariusISNI 0000000452825004
Abels, H.A.ISNI 0000000394681945
Krijgsman, WoutISNI 000000005000270X

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Document Type

Article
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cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Sedimentological facies models for (semi-)isolated basins are less well developed than those for marine environments, but are critical for our understanding of both present-day and ancient deltaic sediment records in restricted depositional environments. This study considers an 835 m thick sedimentary succession of mid-Pliocene age, which accumulated in the Dacian Basin, a former embayment of the Black Sea. Detailed sedimentological and palaeontological analyses reveal a regression from distal prodelta deposits with brackish water faunas to delta-top deposits with freshwater faunas. Sediments contain frequent hyperpycnal plumes and an enrichment in terrestrial organic material, ichnofossils and in situ brackish and freshwater faunas. Deltaic progradation created thin, sharply-based sand bodies formed by multiple terminal distributary channels, covering a wide depositional area. The system experienced frequent delta-lobe switching, resulting in numerous thin parasequences. Parasequences are overlain by erosive reddish oxidized sand beds, enriched in broken, abraded brackish and freshwater shells. These beds were formed after sediment starvation, on top of abandoned delta lobes during each flooding event. A robust magnetostratigraphic time frame allowed for comparison between the observed sedimentary cyclicity and the amplitude and frequency of astronomical forcing cycles. Our results indicate that parasequence frequencies are significantly higher than the number of time equivalent astronomical cycles. This suggests that delta-lobe switching was due to autogenic processes. We consider the observed facies architecture typical for a delta prograding on a low-gradient slope into a shallow, brackish, protected, semi-isolated basin. Furthermore, in the absence of significant wave and tidal influence, sediment progradation in such a protected depositional setting shaped a delta, strongly river-dominated.

Keywords

Autogenic forcing, Flooding surface, Isolated basin, Paratethys, Regressive parasequences, River-dominated delta, Geology, Stratigraphy

Citation

Jorissen, E L, de Leeuw, A, van Baak, C G C, Mandic, O, Stoica, M, Abels, H A & Krijgsman, W 2018, 'Sedimentary architecture and depositional controls of a Pliocene river-dominated delta in the semi-isolated Dacian Basin, Black Sea', Sedimentary Geology, vol. 368, pp. 1-23. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sedgeo.2018.03.001