Abstract

We incorporate a process‐based depositional model with basin subsidence models to predict stratigraphic records. This allows us to investigate the importance of subsidence geometry on coastal stratigraphy and thus to characterize and compare the stratigraphic architecture of two categories of tectonic basins. The models demonstrate that the correlation of stratigraphic sequences to eustatic cycles is not the same in passive margin basins as in foreland basins and that in a foreland basin, the record of episodic tectonism is distinct from that of eustatic sea level change. In the model, sediment transport is approximated by slope‐controlled diffusion; nonmarine transport is treated as more efficient diffusion than marine transport. Three different subsidence and sediment supply models are examined: a simple passive margin basin, a simple foreland basin, and then a foreland basin for which vertical motions are driven by thrust shortening that is compensated flexurally and for which sediment supply is related to relief. Predicted passive margin stratigraphies, for cases of varying eustatic sea level, are similar to those of natural basins and include progradational packages and subaerial unconformities, which are used to define sequence boundaries that form during sea level fall. We explore the timing relationships between stratigraphic features and a sinusoidal sea level history, showing that the phase relationship depends on subsidence, sediment flux, efficiency of sediment transport, and period and amplitude of sea level. When the basic geometry of the basin is inverted, placing the sediment supply on the side with maximum subsidence as is the case in foreland basins, the sequence character changes markedly: subaerial erosion does not generate unconformities. In the models of a dynamic foreland basin, sediment supply and subsidence are linked to the structure of the flanking thrust belt and are not necessarily constant. For steady thrusting and variable sea level, unconformities that define sequence boundaries form only on the distal or forebulge side of the basin, and the ages of the sequence boundaries correlate to limes of rising sea level. In cases of constant sea level but variable thrusting, subaerial unconformities are cut locally on both the proximal margin of the basin and the distal margin of the basin, yet the ages of the proximal margin and distal margin unconformities are out of phase in the tectonic cycle: erosion is most pronounced during quiescence on the proximal side and during thrusting on the distal side.

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