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Low-accommodation and backwater effects on sequence stratigraphic surfaces and depositional architecture of fluvio-deltaic settings (Cretaceous Mesa Rica Sandstone, Dakota Group, USA)

机译:Low-accommodation and backwater effects on sequence stratigraphic surfaces and depositional architecture of fluvio-deltaic settings (Cretaceous Mesa Rica Sandstone, Dakota Group, USA)

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摘要

The adequate documentation and interpretation of regional-scale stratigraphic surfaces is paramount to establish correlations between continental and shallow marine strata. However, this is often challenged by the amalgamated nature of low-accommodation settings and control of backwater hydraulics on fluvio-deltaic stratigraphy. Exhumed examples of full-transect depositional profiles across riverto- delta systems are key to improve our understanding about interacting controlling factors and resultant stratigraphy. This study utilizes the ~400 km transect of the Cenomanian Mesa Rica Sandstone (Dakota Group, USA), which allows mapping of down-dip changes in facies, thickness distribution, fluvial architecture and spatial extent of stratigraphic surfaces. The two sandstone units of the Mesa Rica Sandstone represent contemporaneous fluvio-deltaic deposition in the Tucumcari sub-basin (Western Interior Basin) during two regressive phases. Multivalley deposits pass down-dip into single-story channel sandstones and eventually into contemporaneous distributary channels and delta-front strata. Down-dip changes reflect accommodation decrease towards the paleoshoreline at the Tucumcari basin rim, and subsequent expansion into the basin. Additionally, multi-storey channel deposits bound by erosional composite scours incise into underlying deltaic deposits. These represent incised-valley fill deposits, based on their regional occurrence, estimated channel tops below the surrounding topographic surface and coeval downstepping delta-front geometries. This opposes criteria offered to differentiate incised valleys from floodinduced backwater scours. As the incised valleys evidence relative sea-level fall and flood-induced backwater scours do not, the interpretation of incised valleys impacts sequence stratigraphic interpretations. The erosional composite surface below fluvial strata in the continental realm represents a sequence boundary/regional composite scour (RCS). The RCS' diac

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