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  • 1
    In: Sedimentology, Wiley, Vol. 66, No. 6 ( 2019-10), p. 2234-2267
    Abstract: In recent years it has become clear that many shallow‐marine heterolithic and mudstone‐dominated successions are deposited as mud belts forming part of subaqueous deltas that are related to major fluvial sources either upstream or along shore. Here the Havert Formation is presented as an ancient example of this kind of system. The Havert Formation in the south‐western Barents Sea represents shelf margin clinoforms consisting predominantly of heterolithic deposits. Sediments were mainly derived from the east (Ural Mountains), but a smaller system prograded northward from Fennoscandia. The Havert Formation holds a lot of interest due to: (i) its stratigraphic position, directly above the Permo–Triassic boundary and contemporaneous to the emplacement of the Siberian Traps; (ii) the fact that it represents the first siliciclastic input in the south‐western Barents Sea and it shows interaction between Uralian‐derived and Fennoscandian‐derived sediments; and (iii) its hydrocarbon potential. This study is focused on a detailed sedimentological analysis of cored intervals of the (Ural‐derived) Havert Formation, in combination with seismic interpretation, well‐log correlations and palynological analysis of the Havert and overlying Klappmyss formations. The cored intervals belong to the shelf environment of the Havert shelf‐margin clinoforms (300 to 500 m thick). This sedimentological analysis distinguishes six facies associations, spanning from tidally‐influenced channels at the shoreline to mud‐rich subaqueous platform and foresets of the subaqueous delta. Seismic lines and well‐log correlations show the larger‐scale evolution of the Ural‐derived Havert Formation, characterized by episodes of low‐accommodation and high‐accommodation. The palynological analyses provide the first detailed study of the Havert Formation in the Nordkapp Basin, revising its depositional age in the region as Induan to early Olenekian (Smithian). Furthermore, they strengthen the environmental interpretation; palynofacies present on the shelf record flora of tidally‐influenced coastal plains, whereas the palynofacies in the deep‐water slope contain only amorphous organic matter.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0037-0746 , 1365-3091
    URL: Issue
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 2019
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  • 2
    In: Basin Research, Wiley, Vol. 32, No. 2 ( 2020-04), p. 224-239
    Abstract: Clinoforms are basinward‐dipping and accreting palaeo‐bathymetric profiles that record palaeo‐environmental conditions and processes; thus, clinothems represent natural palaeo‐archives. Here, we document shelf‐edge scale clinoform sets which prograded through the entire width of an epicontinental marine basin (ca. 400 km), eventually encroaching onto the opposite basin flank, where they started to prograde upslope and landward, in defiance of gravity (“upslope‐climbing clinoforms”). The giant westward‐prograding Eridanos muddy shelf‐edge clinothem originated from the Baltic hinterland in the Oligocene and achieved maximum regression in the Early Pleistocene, on the UK Central Graben (CG) and Mid North Sea High (MNSH), after crossing the whole North Sea mesopelagic depocentre and causing near complete basin infill. Here we integrate well and seismic data through the MNSH and CG and examine the Eridanos final heyday and demise, identifying five clinothem complexes (A1, A2, A3, B and C) and six depositional sequence boundaries (SB1 to SB6) in the Miocene‐Recent section. Tectonic and climatic events drove the recent evolution of this system. Early Pleistocene climate cooling, in particular, resulted in a stepwise increase in sediment supply. This climaxed in the earliest Calabrian, following a likely Eburonian eustatic fall (=SB3) when the Eridanos clastic wedge was restructured from a 100–300 m thick compound shelf‐edge and delta system to a “hybrid” shelf‐edge delta at sequence boundary SB3 (ca. 1.75 Ma). In the ca. 40 kyr that followed SB3, a progradation rate peak ( 〉 1,000 m/kyr) is associated with clinoforms starting to accrete upslope, onto the east‐dipping slope between CG and MNSH. This “upslope‐climbing clinoform” phase was quickly followed by the maximum regression and final retreat of the Eridanos system in the Early Calabrian (=SB4), likely as the result of climate‐driven changes in the Baltic hinterland and/or delta auto‐retreat. To our knowledge, this contributions represents the first documentation of “upslope‐climbing clinoforms” recorded in the stratigraphic record.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0950-091X , 1365-2117
    URL: Issue
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 2020
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Geological Society of America ; 1995
    In:  Geology Vol. 23, No. 5 ( 1995), p. 439-
    In: Geology, Geological Society of America, Vol. 23, No. 5 ( 1995), p. 439-
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0091-7613
    Language: English
    Publisher: Geological Society of America
    Publication Date: 1995
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    SSG: 13
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Geological Society of America ; 2018
    In:  GSA Bulletin Vol. 130, No. 1-2 ( 2018-01-01), p. 263-283
    In: GSA Bulletin, Geological Society of America, Vol. 130, No. 1-2 ( 2018-01-01), p. 263-283
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0016-7606
    Language: English
    Publisher: Geological Society of America
    Publication Date: 2018
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  • 5
    In: Geology, Geological Society of America, Vol. 37, No. 7 ( 2009-7), p. 587-590
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1943-2682 , 0091-7613
    Language: English
    Publisher: Geological Society of America
    Publication Date: 2009
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  • 6
    In: Sedimentology, Wiley, Vol. 46, No. 2 ( 1999-04), p. 235-263
    Abstract: The concept of stratigraphic base level, or the ratio between accommodation and sediment supply (A/S ratio), has been used to analyse the Rusty and Canyon Creek Members of the Campanian Ericson Sandstone in the Rock Springs Uplift, SW Wyoming, USA. The Ericson Sandstone was deposited under fluvial to estuarine conditions in a foreland basin setting influenced both by Sevier‐style (thrust belt) tectonism and by more local, Laramide‐style, foreland uplifts. The depositional setting was situated several tens to a few hundred kilometres from the nearest shoreline. Therefore, sea level change at the contemporaneous shoreline probably had little, if any, influence on the development of the sedimentary architecture. The Rusty Member shows an alternation between incised valleys filled by multi‐storey estuarine channel sandstones showing palaeoflow to the south and delta plain sediments with single‐storey channels with no evidence of tidal influence, which show palaeoflow to the east. This cyclicity is interpreted as recording repeated uplift of the Wind River Range to the north, causing valley incision and reduction of the A/S ratio. During quiescent periods, the A/S ratio increased allowing the valleys to fill and delta plain conditions to be subsequently re‐established because of increased sediment supply from the thrust belt in the west. A regional unconformity at the base of the Canyon Creek Member truncates the Rusty Member, and represents a significant reduction of the A/S ratio caused by Laramide tectonic uplift. The Canyon Creek Member is a multi‐storey, multi‐lateral fluvial channel sandstone, where channel preservation and thickness increase upwards, suggesting an increase of the A/S ratio. The Canyon Creek Member channels are interpreted to have been sinuous, meandering channels from the observed sedimentary structures and fill patterns, despite their sand‐rich nature. It is argued that grain size is a poor indicator of channel planform, and that there was very low preservation potential for fine material because of a relatively low A/S ratio. The top of the Canyon Creek Member is a regionally correlative surface marking an abrupt increase of the A/S ratio. This surface is termed an expansion surface , denoting an abrupt increase in accommodation. The overlying Almond Formation shows a single‐storey alluvial architecture with a very high preservation of fine‐grained material. An assumed correspondence in time of the Late Absaroka thrust phase in the Sevier belt to the west and the formation of the sharp top of the Canyon Creek Member suggests that the thrust phase caused a basin‐wide abrupt increase of subsidence that changed the alluvial architecture. As an alternative to sequence stratigraphic nomenclature defined for strata controlled by shoreline movements, a scheme relating systems tracts and surfaces to changes in stratigraphic base level is proposed. Such a scheme is useful where correlations to shoreline strata are ambiguous or cannot be made, or where tectonics and climate are important controls.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0037-0746 , 1365-3091
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 1999
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  • 7
    In: Sedimentology, Wiley, Vol. 67, No. 2 ( 2020-02), p. 742-781
    Abstract: The hydrodynamic mechanisms responsible for the genesis and facies variability of shallow‐marine sandstone storm deposits (tempestites) have been intensely debated, with particular focus on hummocky cross‐stratification. Despite being ubiquitously utilized as diagnostic elements of high‐energy storm events, the full formative process spectrum of tempestites and hummocky cross‐stratification is still to be determined. In this study, detailed sedimentological investigations of more than 950 discrete tempestites within the Lower Cretaceous Rurikfjellet Formation on Spitsbergen, Svalbard, shed new light on the formation and environmental significance of hummocky cross‐stratification, and provide a reference for evaluation of tempestite facies models. Three generic types of tempestites are recognized, representing deposition from: (i) relatively steady and (ii) highly unsteady storm‐wave‐generated oscillatory flows or oscillatory‐dominated combined‐flows; and (iii) various storm‐wave‐modified hyperpycnal flows (including waxing–waning flows) generated directly from plunging rivers. A low‐gradient ramp physiography enhanced both distally progressive deceleration of the hyperpycnal flows and the spatial extent and relative magnitude of wave‐added turbulence. Sandstone beds display a wide range of simple and complex configurations of hummocky cross‐stratification. Features include ripple cross‐lamination and ‘compound’ stratification, soft‐sediment deformation structures, local shifts to quasi‐planar lamination, double draping, metre‐scale channelized bed architectures, gravel‐rich intervals, inverse‐to‐normal grading, and vertical alternation of sedimentary structures. A polygenetic model is presented to account for the various configurations of hummocky cross‐stratification that may commonly be produced during storms by wave oscillations, hyperpycnal flows and downwelling flows. Inherent storm‐wave unsteadiness probably facilitates the generation of a wide range of hummocky cross‐stratification configurations due to: (i) changes in near‐bed oscillatory shear stresses related to passing wave groups or tidal water‐level variations; (ii) multidirectional combined‐flows related to polymodal and time‐varying orientations of wave oscillations; and (iii) syndepositional liquefaction related to cyclic wave stress. Previous proximal–distal tempestite facies models may only be applicable to relatively high‐gradient shelves, and new models are necessary for low‐gradient settings.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0037-0746 , 1365-3091
    URL: Issue
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 2020
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    SSG: 13
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Elsevier BV ; 1994
    In:  Sedimentary Geology Vol. 92, No. 1-2 ( 1994-8), p. 31-52
    In: Sedimentary Geology, Elsevier BV, Vol. 92, No. 1-2 ( 1994-8), p. 31-52
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0037-0738
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Elsevier BV
    Publication Date: 1994
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  • 9
    In: Marine and Petroleum Geology, Elsevier BV, Vol. 62 ( 2015-04), p. 102-122
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0264-8172
    Language: English
    Publisher: Elsevier BV
    Publication Date: 2015
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  • 10
    In: Basin Research, Wiley, Vol. 21, No. 5 ( 2009-10), p. 445-453
    Abstract: The Shelf Edge and Shoreline Trajectories Conference, convened in Tromsø, Norway, during the autumn of 2007, was attended by a group of specialists working in the crossover between industry and academia. This paper introduces the concepts of shelf edge‐ and shoreline‐trajectory analysis, and discusses some of the advantages of applying such concepts in contrast to more traditional sequence stratigraphic analysis. This special issue of Basin Research focuses on how observations of outcrop and subsurface datasets, particularly three‐dimensional (3D) seismic data, may be used as an aid to identify palaeo‐shelf edges and shorelines. Moreover, the approach shows how linking the cross‐sectional path of a shoreline as it migrates (shoreline trajectory) and the pathway taken by the shelf‐edge during the development of a series of accreting clinoforms (shelf‐edge trajectory) to the analysis of sedimentological or seismic facies can improve predictions of lithology distribution. The following 15 papers present well‐documented case studies from a variety of shelf and shelf‐margin settings where these concepts have been applied to depositional systems ranging in age from Permian to Recent. A wide spectrum of data types and methods, including two dimensional and 3D seismic data, well logs and core material as well as high‐resolution biostratigraphy, outcrop studies and modern bathymetric data have been applied in the various papers. Despite the considerable age range of the deposits investigated and the data types used for the studies, all of the authors have converged towards the objective approach of trajectory analysis. However, any analytical method has some uncertainty attached to it, and a discussion of possible pitfalls and sources of error is also a part of this introductory paper. Although this special issue presents some recent advances in the way to conduct stratigraphic analysis, we realise that this is only a further step in an evolving discipline. Development of sequence stratigraphic concepts will continue, and new contributions will evaluate past work as they seek to develop the subject.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0950-091X , 1365-2117
    URL: Issue
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 2009
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    SSG: 16,13
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