Abstract: High-frequency sequence stratigraphy of the Lower Oligocene La Pascua Formation: Effect of relative sea level on the size, geometry and spacing of depositional systems

AAPG Bulletin ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 84 (2000) ◽  
Author(s):  
John Reistroffer1, Gerald Baum2, Ch
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao-Cheng Zhu ◽  
Wen-Shan Chen

<p>In northwestern Taiwan, Cholan Formation in Dahan river is about 1400 m thick that contains high-frequency sequence stratigraphy (6<sup>th</sup>-order) and detail of facies architecture which indicates evolution of the foreland basin. In late Miocene (6 Ma), the Taiwan orogeny belt is formed by the arc-continental collision (the Luzon Volcanic Arc and the Eurasian plate). During Pliocene-Pleistocene, uplift of the Hsueshan Range and the Western Foothill created by a series of the fold-thrust belt formed the foreland basin. Most importantly, high subsidence rate and high sedimentation rate are critical that glacio-eustasy (6<sup>th</sup>-order) could be correlated to parasequences in Cholan Formation. It provides a precise age model to discuss different stages of foreland basin.</p><p>Parasequences in Cholan Formation could be divided into three types of depositional systems including siliciclastic shallow marine (Type 1), margin marine (Type 2) and nonmarine (Type 3) that are a typical sequence of foreland basins. Type 1, which is tidal-dominated open coast, shows 10-30 m coarsening-upward succession. Type 2, which is tidal-dominated delta, shows two different parts. The lower part is 10-50 m coarsening-upward succession which unconformity contact with Type 1. The upper part changes to 20-50 m fining-upward succession. Type 3, which is alluvial system, shows 30-70 m fining-upward succession that is conformable with Type 2. From shallow marine to nonmarine, the thickness of parasequence is growing thicker that indicates long-term tectonic subsidence rate is getting higher with more sediment deposits in the basin. In more detail, in marine setting, sea level change is the main considered factor to identify sequence boundary (SB) and maximum flooding surface (MFS), while in nonmarine setting, precipitation change in glacial and inter-glacial may be a critical factor to impact the formation of SB. However, MFS is complicated to define because some parasequences show tidal signal, but some don’t. It could be influenced by degree of sea level uplift or paleotopography. In Cholan Formation, the signal of sea level, tectonic and climate is sensitive to reflect in stratigraphy architecture.</p><p><strong>Keywords: </strong>Foreland basin, High-order sequence stratigraphy, Marine to nonmarine facies architecture</p>


1997 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 99-123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan C. Sørensen ◽  
Ulrik Gregersen ◽  
Morten Breiner ◽  
Olaf Michelsen

1999 ◽  
Vol 136 (6) ◽  
pp. 681-696 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. J. UNDERWOOD ◽  
S. F. MITCHELL

The mid-Cretaceous sediments of northeast England were deposited at the western margin of the southern North Sea Basin, with sedimentation occurring in a range of tectonic settings. Detailed analysis of the areal distribution and sedimentary facies of Aptian to earliest Cenomanian sediments has allowed the pattern of onlap onto the Market Weighton structural high and changes in relative sea level to be documented. Successive onlap episodes during the Early Aptian, Late Aptian and Early Albian culminated in the final flooding of the structure during the Late Albian (varicosum Subzone). Sea-level curves generated from coastal onlap patterns are difficult to relate to published ‘global’ sea-level curves due to the high frequency of the fluctuations in relative sea level observed. Despite this, detailed correlation and analysis of sedimentological events suggest that even the most expanded, basinal succession is relatively incomplete. This study has also shown that the change from dominantly syn-tectonic to dominantly post-tectonic sedimentation style occurred in the late Early Albian.


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