The effects of differential compaction on clinothem geometries and shelf-edge trajectories
Publication date
2019-09-06
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
The geometry of basin-margin strata documents changes in water depth, slope steepness, and sedimentary facies distributions. Their stacking patterns are widely used to define shelf-edge trajectories, which reflect long-term variations in sediment supply and relative sea-level change. Here, we present a new method to reconstruct the geometries and trajectories of clinoform-bearing basin-margin successions. Our sequential decompaction technique explicitly accounts for downdip lithology variations, which are inherent to basin-margin stratigraphy. Our case studies show that preferential compaction of distal, fine-grained foresets and bottomsets results in a vertical extension of basin-margin strata and a basinward rotation of the original shelf-edge trajectory. We discuss the implications these effects have for sea-level reconstructions and for predicting the timing of sediment transfer to the basin floor.
Keywords
Citation
Beelen, D, Jackson, C A-L, Patruno, S, Hodgson, D M & Trabucho-Alexandre, J 2019, 'The effects of differential compaction on clinothem geometries and shelf-edge trajectories', Geology, vol. 47, no. 11, pp. 1011-1014. https://doi.org/10.1130/G46693.1