Evolution of fluvial meander-belt deposits and implications for the completeness of the stratigraphic recordShow full item record
Title | Evolution of fluvial meander-belt deposits and implications for the completeness of the stratigraphic record |
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Author | Durkin, Paul R.; Hubbard, Stephen M.; Holbrook, John M.; Boyd, Ron |
Date | 2018-05-01 |
Abstract | The fragmentary nature of the stratigraphic record is particularly evident with respect to fluvial deposits, which are characterized by a hierarchy of depositional units deposited over a wide range of time scales and sedimentation rates. We quantified stratigraphic completeness in meander-belt deposits through deducing the total area of bar sedimentation versus what is ultimately preserved in the depositional record, using area as a surrogate metric for sediment volume. Data sets were evaluated for a numerical model, the modern Mississippi River valley, and the Cretaceous McMurray Formation. In each data set, the evolutionary history of a series of meander-belt elements was discerned. Migrated area between successive reconstructed paleochannel positions was measured, representing: total area of net bar migration (MA), the area of bar preserved (PA), and percent of bar preserved (PA/MA), at the accretion package, bar, and meander-belt scale. Results of our analysis show that the average preservation percent ranges from 27.3% to 67.8% for an accretion package, 35.0% to 85.1% for a bar, and 38.2% to 67.6% for a meander belt. The processes that lead to a decrease in preservation include intra-meander-bend erosion (due to downstream translation or bar rotation), and increasing meander-bend sinuosity and eventual cutoff (neck and chute), as well as inter-meander-bend erosion due to avulsion and subsequent migration of the meandering channel. The results of this study document a decrease in preservation over time that follows a natural logarithmic function of decay; we have termed this the "survivability" curve. The results presented here document a systematic, monotonic decrease in preservation over time, which is consistent regardless of the spatial or temporal scale and agrees with probabilities of preservation at long time scales proposed by previous workers. A comparison between data sets allows for an estimation of the time span represented by meander-belt deposits in the deep time record. |
Link | https://doi.org/10.1130/b31699.1
https://repository.tcu.edu/handle/116099117/26418 https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/gsabulletin/article/130/5-6/721/525539/Evolution-of-fluvial-meanderbelt-deposits-and |
Department | Geological Sciences |
Subject | Athabasca oil sands
sediment accumulation rates McMurray formation fractal nature channel fills point bars river Canada Alberta preservation |
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