1 / 70

Enigma of the missing time; are storm events on carbonate shelves the key to gaps in the geologic record or an indicatio

Kendall ? Time

garrick
Download Presentation

Enigma of the missing time; are storm events on carbonate shelves the key to gaps in the geologic record or an indicatio

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. Kendall – Time & Events Enigma of the missing time; are storm events on carbonate shelves the key to gaps in the geologic record or an indication of indecipherable noise in layered rock? Christopher G. St. C. Kendall Geological Science University of South Carolina

    2. Kendall – Time & Events Paradoxical Statement!

    3. Kendall – Time & Events Sedimentary evidence of “Missing Time”!

    4. Kendall – Time & Events Continuum of Sedimentary Processes

    5. Kendall – Time & Events Walther’s Law "Facies adjacent to one another in a continuous vertical sequence also accumulated adjacent to one another laterally". Applies only to a section with no unconformities. Applies to a section without subdividing diachronous boundaries, including transgressive surfaces (TS) and the maximum flooding surfaces (mfs). The interpretation of depositional setting for a section cut by diachronous surfaces must contravene Walther’s Law but does not? An oversimplification that works!!!

    6. Kendall – Time & Events Introduction to subdividing surfaces Range from: Lowest frequency major subdivisions in sedimentary section - the sequence Lower frequency surfaces that define cycles {parasequences} (genetically related cycles or packages of sediment) High frequency surfaces that define beds

    7. Kendall – Time & Events Link between time, surfaces & layers Each layer no matter its dimension and whatever the time involved in its deposition, is bounded by surfaces that transgress time The interpretation of depositional setting for a section cut by diachronous surfaces must contravene Walther’s Law

    8. Kendall – Time & Events Link between time, surfaces & layers Application of Steno's principles and Walther’s Law provide powerful and useful simplifications that assume the sediments packaged by surfaces accumulated within discrete moments of time. If one thinks about this, these simplifications don’t contravene logic (which is literally Fuzzy) and it aids in the interpretation of the sedimentary section.

    9. Kendall – Time & Events Basis of sequence stratigraphic interpretations of carbonates Lower frequency Sequence Boundaries Transgressive surfaces (TS) Maximum flooding surfaces (mfs)

    10. Kendall – Time & Events

    11. Kendall – Time & Events Lst Sequence Stratigraphic Hierarchies

    12. Kendall – Time & Events Lst Sequence Stratigraphic Hierarchies

    13. Kendall – Time & Events Controls on Carbonate Surfaces

    14. Kendall – Time & Events Bounding surfaces - Defined by origin Internal and external surfaces of any Stratigraphic sequence Cycle (Parasequence) Bed Products of unique associations of processes.

    15. Kendall – Time & Events Bounding surfaces - Defined by origin Internal and external surfaces of any Stratigraphic sequence Cycle (Parasequence) Bed Products of unique associations of processes.

    16. Kendall – Time & Events Bedding Planes Beds are enclosed or bounded by sharply defined upper & lower surfaces or bedding planes. These surfaces are easiest physical features of sedimentary rocks to identify in outcrop Subdivide successions of sedimentary rock into beds Used to determine relative order & timing of accumulation of sediments forming beds Character of bedding planes, be they eroded, cemented, bored, bioturbated, or depositional surfaces used to aid in interpretation of sedimentary rocks.

    17. Kendall – Time & Events Bedding Planes Most probably formed by erosion of unconsolidated sediment collected at sediment surface. Weight of sediment, just beneath sediment surface, causes sediment to dewater, compact & become cohesive Less cohesive sediment of surface truncated & expose surface of firmer cohesive sediment below at bedding plane surface in response to: Storm waves Fast flowing currents of water (say in tidal or fluvial channels) Turbid flow of a density current

    18. Kendall – Time & Events

    19. Kendall – Time & Events Bedding Planes

    20. Kendall – Time & Events Link of Time to Bedding Planes Curtailed or no sediment accumulation on surface can lead to Burrowing by Glossifungites Cementation at or close to sediment water interface by Exposure to photosynthetic effects of cyanobacteria Elevated salinities or upwelling ground waters If surfaces are exposed any length of time they may be colonized & bored by marine organisms; e.g.: Miocene of Murray Basin, Devonian of Canning Basin & Jurassic of the Arabian Gulf. Paradoxically Ordovician often not.

    21. Kendall – Time & Events Characteristics of Transgressive Surface [TS) Inferred from presence of Glossifungites that burrows this surface

    22. Kendall – Time & Events Link of Time to Bedding Planes Though we see facies changes across bedding planes, the vertical succession more often than not contains no apparent unconformities or major breaks. These usually occur at: Sequence boundaries Transgressive surfaces Maximum flooding surfaces.

    23. Kendall – Time & Events Guadalupe Shelf – Slaughter Canyon

    24. Kendall – Time & Events

    25. Kendall – Time & Events Carbonate Shelf – Jurassic - Morocco

    26. Kendall – Time & Events

    27. Kendall – Time & Events Basin – Moroccan High Atlas

    28. Kendall – Time & Events Alternating Mcrite & Marl - Basin – Moroccan High Atlas

    29. Kendall – Time & Events Link between time, surfaces & layers Sedimentary layering of a stratigraphic section has a vast array of dimensional hierarchies Range from units millimeters thick, formed over seconds, to thousands of feet thick, formed of millions of years Each layer, no matter its dimension and the time involved in its deposition, is bounded by surfaces that transgress time

    30. Kendall – Time & Events Link between time, surfaces & layers

    31. Kendall – Time & Events Paradox of Time 40 Mile wide transgressive regressive shelf sequences of late Albian Georgetown in Pecos Valley are equated with 800,000 years Modern rates of accumulation would produce same sedimentary fill in 80,000 years Similar set of values calculated for Seven Rivers Formation of Permian basin

    32. Kendall – Time & Events Paradox of Time - Albian Tx

    33. Kendall – Time & Events Continuum of Sedimentary Processes Stream Migration Coastal progradation

    34. Kendall – Time & Events

    35. Kendall – Time & Events

    36. Kendall – Time & Events

    37. Kendall – Time & Events Clear Events in Time Spectra Storms Turbidites

    38. Kendall – Time & Events

    39. Kendall – Time & Events Storm Events – Product - Tempestites Common during changes in base level Storm waves and currents extend to and just below wave base in shallow shelf settings Cause sediment deposition and reworking Produce coarsening up cycles in shallow water settings In deeper water sedimentary cycles of both tempestites and turbidites tend to be composed of graded beds that fine upward

    40. Kendall – Time & Events

    41. Kendall – Time & Events Carbonates Storm Deposits Represented by cycles of carbonate that are coarse at base & fine up to shale Coarser portion of each cycle is interpreted to be result of water being shallow enough for storms to sort sea floor, while fines represent water deep enough to afford protection from effects of similar storms

    42. Kendall – Time & Events Setting of Storm Deposits Carbonate storm deposits associated with ramp margins lacking organic binding or cementation, enabling sediment dispersal Presence of storm deposits are indices of lack of cementation and/or organic binding Occurrence of larger metazoan skeletons enhances capacity for surface of ramp to build above a shelf equilibrium profile

    43. Kendall – Time & Events

    44. Kendall – Time & Events Examples of Storm Deposits Oligocene/Miocene of the Murray Basin Upper Ordovician of Kentucky & Ohio Upper Jurassic Hanifa & Jubaila Fms of Arabian cratonic margin basin Lower Cretaceous of Arabian Gulf

    45. Kendall – Time & Events Examples of Storm Deposits Oligocene/Miocene of the Murray Basin Upper Ordovician of Kentucky & Ohio Upper Jurassic Hanifa & Jubaila Fms of Arabian cratonic margin basin Lower Cretaceous of Arabian Gulf

    46. Kendall – Time & Events Cycles on temperate-water epeiric ramp: Part A-biotically depauperate carbonates of relatively shallow-water, restricted, variably stressed highly mesotrophic settings Part B-increasingly diverse biotic lst. with progressively more physical energy & less mesotrophic conditions upward OM1- hardground to firmground surface of late transgression to stillstand wave swept & reworked causing omission & lithification Part C—relatively diverse, epifauna-dominant sediments highly abraded during periods of oligotrophic condensed sedimentation OM2 (cycle boundary)—a rarely conspicuous surface of arrested sedimentation & variable cementation as trophic resources increased & conditions for carbonate production deteriorated

    47. Kendall – Time & Events

    48. Kendall – Time & Events

    49. Kendall – Time & Events

    50. Kendall – Time & Events Examples of Storm Deposits Oligocene/Miocene of the Murray Basin Upper Ordovician of Kentucky & Ohio Upper Jurassic Hanifa & Jubaila Fms of Arabian cratonic margin basin Lower Cretaceous of Arabian Gulf

    51. Kendall – Time & Events Storm Events – Ordovician Kentucky Epicontinental ramp exposed to periodic storms Succession of carbonates, siltstones & shales Cyclic character of each cycle becomes coarser & contains less shale upward Coarser portion of each cycle when water shallow enough for storms to sort sea floor Finer portions of the section represent water deep enough to protect from similar storms Low stands in sea level more likely to affect floor with storms Highs the section likely to starve sediment & cause “surfaces of condensation” Each cycle has a “storm” sorted base produced by last major event, & a cap from quieter water conditions

    52. Kendall – Time & Events

    53. Kendall – Time & Events Graded Beds

    54. Kendall – Time & Events Graded Beds

    55. Kendall – Time & Events Graded Beds

    56. Kendall – Time & Events Waves Modify Surface of Tempestite as with Turbidites

    57. Kendall – Time & Events

    58. Kendall – Time & Events

    59. Kendall – Time & Events

    60. Kendall – Time & Events

    61. Kendall – Time & Events

    62. Kendall – Time & Events

    63. Kendall – Time & Events Paradoxes of Storm Deposits? Wide spread storm events have been identified on ramps explaining occurrence of shallow water cycles that do not make it to sea level Surface of ramps on which storm deposits occur related to: An ecological base level that does not match hydrodynamic base level but is connected to it ( Pomar(2001) Lack of local cementation Ramp response to increase of accommodation is ascribed to Eustasy Tectonic events Storm deposits can be sorted, rounded, & incorporate several generations of sediment component that are product of Single large storms at sea level low? Multiple storms? Cannibalism supports lack of cementation & binding on ramp? Micritization of the surfaces of gravels grains can be common but more often it is not: Time spent exposed on sea floor insufficient for cyanobacteria colonization?

    64. Kendall – Time & Events Preliminary Conclusions Wide spread sea level events matched to storm prone portions of geological section Accommodation controls carbonate productivity Lows favor carbonate production and storm sorting Highs reduce carbonate productivity and induce condensation of section This response explains the lack of tidal flat fill on ramps Suggest a continuum of processes applied to section but no time gaps or lost sediment!

    65. Kendall – Time & Events Turbiditic Events – Product - Turbidites Common during changes in base level Sudden sediment mobilization on shelf margin by over-steepening of sea floor & sudden movement downslope triggered by Too much sediment Storms Earthquakes Form cyclic bundles of fining up graded beds Symmetric or asymmetric of sequences Complete and incomplete cycles Latter reflect non-deposition &/or erosion during depositional cycle

    66. Kendall – Time & Events

    67. Kendall – Time & Events Storm & Turbiditic Events Often mark changes in base level Recurring processes associated with depositional regime (autocyclic) generate successions of symmetric or asymmetric bundles cyclic beds Complete & incomplete cycles, latter reflecting non-deposition &/or erosion during depositional cycle Varying magnitudes, larger rarer events wipe out signatures of earlier smaller Non-periodic sequences caused by irregular stratigraphic events Storms & turbidite currents are unpredictable, sudden, & catastrophic but sediments deposited by them are very clear time markers

    68. Kendall – Time & Events Storm & Turbiditic Events Juxtaposition of similar vertical facies in sedimentary record appears complete No extensive erosion, so lacks evidence of missing time Even fauna exposed on seafloor may be unaltered & unbored in Ordovician despite apparently long periods on seafloor In Jurassic and Miocene these grains show clear evidence of boring, and alteration. Storms & turbidite currents are unpredictable, sudden, & catastrophic but sediments deposited by them are very clear time markers

    69. Kendall – Time & Events Paradoxical Conclusion

    70. Kendall – Time & Events Where is sedimentary evidence of Missing Time!

More Related