Unit 6 - Depositional Environments Flashcards

1
Q

What does facies analysis mean?

A
  • the method used to interpret the environment of deposition of a sedimentary succession
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2
Q

What does facies mean?

A
  • it refers to a unit that is identified by having certain specific characteristics.
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3
Q

Depositional facies is defined by?

A
  • lithology (physical characteristics) of the sediment

this includes:

  • sedimentary structures
  • colour
  • diagenetic character
  • fossil content.
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4
Q

What is a depositional system?

A
  • three-dimensional association of facies, which are genetically linked by sedimentary processes and environments of deposition
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5
Q

Interpretation of facies tell us what?

A

the responsible processes for the depostion of the facies but not about the environment of the deposition → to identify that, we need to consider the vertical and lateral association of facies

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6
Q

What is a genetic unit?

A
  • a group of facies associations that were formed by closely related processes in related depositional environments

Example: a delta lobe would form a genetic unit, containing several sandstone facies (channel deposits) as well as mudstone, siltstone and coaly facies deposited in inter-channel areas.

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7
Q

the arrangement of multiple facies is highly dependent on ?

A

the depostional environment

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8
Q

Where do aeolian sediments mostly occur?

A

Desert environments

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9
Q

How thick are aeolian dune sets normally?

A

meters to 10s of meters → barely happens subaqueous → therefore large set size is often taken as aeolian origin

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10
Q

Periods of wetting and drying in aeolian successions can be caused by ?

A
  • rise in sea or lake level or increase in rainfall
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11
Q

What happens to aeolian dunes during wetting periods?

A
  • They are less active and might get eroded
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12
Q

The four types of channels of river forms (fluvial environments)?

A
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13
Q

What are the two most common types of river systems?

A
  • meandering
  • braided
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14
Q

An old meander loop often turns to an ?

A

ox-box lake

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15
Q

What is the floodplain?

A
  • the surrounding low-lying land of a river, which may be flooded during periods of flooding
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16
Q

What happens, when a river breaks through its banks?

A

They form temporary crevasse channels

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17
Q

If river go over their banks during a flood, how will they distribute their sediments?

A
  • They will deposit their coarser sediments closer to the river → they produce thin beds, that become finer and thinner, the further away from the river
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18
Q

What is a levee?

A
  • if meandering rivers repeatedly produce floods over many years → elevated ridges of sediment, known as levees, close to the channel will start to form
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19
Q

What is the difference between a meandering river and a braided river?

A
  • Meandering rivers only have one active channel at a time
  • braided rivers have number of active channels, separated by sandy or gravelly bars
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20
Q

Where do braided rivers form?

A
  • slightly steeper slopes

→ with a high proportion of sandy or gravelly sediment

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21
Q

In which direction do individual channels of braided river systems migrate?

A
  • laterally, shifting their course frequently
  • the intervening bars migrate both downstream and across the streams

→ Braided rivers therefore produce compound sandbodies consisting of a number of mutually-erosive channel bodies

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22
Q

Anastomosing rivers create which kind of sand bodies?

A
  • relatively narrow but thick multi-storey sandbodies
23
Q

Meandering Rivers produce classically what kind of sandbodies?

A

erosive-based, upward-fining sandbodies

24
Q

What do rivers form when they leave the confines of a valley ?

A
  • they usually form cones of sediment known as alluvial fans
25
Q

Describe alluvial fans

A
  • sediment becomes finer away from fan apex
  • migration of fan produces an upwards coarsing trend
26
Q

When the relative sealevel falls, what happens to the sediment passing through an incised valley?

A
  • it will bypass it
27
Q

When the relative sealevel rises, what happens to the sediment passing through an incised valley?

A

Sedimentation will start in the incised valley, which will continue into the highstand period

28
Q

Beaches form the boundary between …?

A

Shallow marine and terrestrial environments

29
Q

Why does a beach produce an upward-coarsening facies sequence, as it progrades offshore?

A

Because in general, the energy is greatest, and the sediment coarsest, on the higher parts of the beach profile

30
Q

Why are waters in a lagoon brackish?

A

Because of the mixing of fresh water and of sea water → brackish means intermediate salinity

31
Q

How is a delta formed , generally?

A

major river reaches a standing body of water, such as a lake or the sea.

→ river supplies the sediment faster than the basinal processes in body of water can rework it, then the shoreline will project locally into the basin, forming a delta.

32
Q

What will a river do on the subaerial part of the delta plain?

A

Split itself up into two or more little channels causing sediment to be supplied to many points along the delta front

33
Q

What are reasons for the different delta forms?

A

climate, tectonic setting, sediment supply, energy of receiving basin

34
Q

What will fluvial dominated deltas do?

A
  • supply more sediment to coastline than can be reworked by basinal processes → resultant delta will therefore form a pronounced protuberance of the shoreline
35
Q

What will tidal dominated deltas do?

A

the tidal processes will most likely produce a radial pattern of distributary channels which become broader towards the basin

36
Q

What will wave-dominated deltas do ?

A
  • a big amount of the sediment supplied by river mouth will be reworked into beach ridges on either side. The resulting delta will, therefore, often cause only a slight deflection of the coastline
37
Q

What happens generally at the mouths of channels on fluvial-dominated deltas, where sediment laden river waters interact with the basinal water?

A
  • fluvial flow loses power and starts to deposit sediment → sediment fines away from the apex
  • Progradation oft delta mouthbar therefore produces an upward-coarsening sequence dominated by current-generated structures
38
Q

What will the vertical facies of wave dominated deltas look like?

A
  • Facies sequences will be very similar to those produced by prograding beaches → differing mainly by the presence of associated distributary channels
39
Q

What is a big difference between the physical processes like tides and waves of coastal and shallow marine environments and deep marine clastic environments ?

A

tides and waves, which dominate coastal and shallow marine environments are generally absent or ineffective in the deep marine environment

40
Q

What kind of environments are deep oceans most of the time?

A
  • low-energy environments in which fine grained carbonate or clastic muds are able to accumulate
  • coarse-grained sediment is transported into these environments by several infrequent and shortlived processes, of which the sediment gravity flow processes (slumps, debris flows, turbidity currents etc.) are dominant.
41
Q

What were the earliest deep marine sandstones?

A

Turbidites

42
Q

Facies models for turbidites, debris flow deposits (debrites) and slump deposits - it is just a graphik, to check out the succesions!

A
43
Q

In deep marine clastic environments, examination of some turbidite successions showed that facies sequences, in which the thickness and/or mean grain size of the sandstone beds increased or decreased upwards what is the explanation for that?

A
  • these trends were attributed to the deposition on different parts of a submarine fan
44
Q

What is a submarine fan?

A
  • occur offshore from major river systems or off the continental shelf
  • they are sourced from a single point (like deltas) ( or multiple sourced) and contain a system of distributary channels supplying lobes
  • upward-thickening trends in turbidite sequences are attributed to the progradation of fan lobes
  • upward-thinning trends to deposition within a channel.
45
Q

Multiple source submarine fan (Graphic)

A
46
Q

What are the “natural” sediments in marine environments?

A

Carbonates

47
Q

What is a big difference between clastic grains and carbonate grains?

A
  • clastic grains have their origin most of the time further away from their site of deposition
  • carbonate grains are formed at or very close to their eventual site of deposition
48
Q

What are bioclasts?

A
  • majority of carbonate grains are precipitated by organisms

or by biochemical processes

  • clasts derived from skeletal material are known as bioclasts → most of the time broken pieces of skeletons
49
Q

What are pellets or pelloids?

A
  • ovoid shapes composed of micrite (lime mud) and microscopic shells
50
Q

What are ooids?

A
  • small (less than 2mm) near-spherical carbonate grains
  • generally form in moderate to high energy shallow marine environments
51
Q

What are intraclasts?

A
  • common for carbonates to be partially lithified at, or close to, the sediment surface

→ If erosion then occurs, sediment may break into groups of grains lightly cemented together →called intraclasts

52
Q

Where are the majority of carbonates deposited?

A
  • marine or lacustrine environments
53
Q
A