Abstract

Analysis of variation in changing rates of accommodation space creation, as represented by stratigraphic thickness, has become an integral part of ongoing investigations into the origin of ancient, meter-scale, upward-shoaling, cyclic marine carbonates. Groupings of thicker than average and thinner than average cycles within long stratigraphic sections have been thought to represent the influence of long-term eustatic sealevel variation on rates of accommodation space creation under conditions of constant basin subsidence. Statistical analysis demonstrates that a large percentage of early Paleozoic cyclic carbonate sequences contain thickness distributions indistinguishable from those anticipated for random associations of cycles, and that only a few have characteristics commensurate with long-term changes in rate of accommodation space creation. Moreover, in those cases where some extraneous control is suggested, computational considerations readily demonstrate that change in subsidence rate and/or diffe...

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