Abstract

Facies models of the internal fills of incised valleys developed in shelf and coastal settings during cycles of relative sea-level change are largely conceptual, descriptive and qualitative in form; moreover, they are commonly bespoke to individual examples. Here, a database-driven quantitative statistical analysis of 87 late-Quaternary incised-valley fills (IVFs) has been undertaken to assess the general validity and predictive value of classical facies models for IVFs, and to investigate the relative importance of possible controls on their stratigraphic organization. Based on datasets from the published literature stored in a sedimentological database, the geometry and proportion of systems tracts, and of architectural elements of different hierarchies within IVFs are quantified. These variables were analysed to assess how they vary in relation to parameters that represent potential controlling factors: relative sea-level stage, continental-margin type, drainage-basin area, valley geometry, basin physiography and shoreline hydrodynamics.The stratigraphic organization of the studied coastal-plain IVFs is generally consistent with that represented in facies models, the primary control being the rate and magnitude of relative sea-level change. However, results from this study demonstrate significant variability in the stratigraphic architectures of IVFs, which is not accounted for by existing models. Variations in the facies architecture of coastal-plain and cross-shelf valley fills can be attributed to controls other than sea level, and expressed in relationships with continental-margin type, basin physiography, catchment area, river-system size and shoreline hydrodynamics. The following primary findings arise from this research. (i) Compared to their counterparts on passive margins, coastal-plain IVFs hosted on active margins contain, on average, a higher proportion of fluvial deposits and a lower proportion of central-basin estuarine deposits; estuarine deposits tend however to be thicker. This suggests a control on IVF stratigraphic architecture exerted by distinct characteristics of the tectonic setting of the host continental margins, notably basin physiography, rates and mode of sediment supply, and nature of sediment load. (ii) The thickness and proportion of lowstand systems tract are positively correlated with coastal-plain IVF dimensions, likely reflecting the role of drainage-basin area in dictating the scale of the fluvial systems that carved and infilled the valleys. (iii) Positive correlations are observed between the thickness of fluvial deposits, bayhead-delta deposits and central-basin estuarine deposits, versus coastal-plain IVF dimensions and valley catchment area. This suggests a control exerted by the river-system scale on sediment-supply rates and on the accommodation determined by valley size. (iv) Positive correlations between the thickness and proportion of barrier-complex deposits within cross-shelf IVFs versus mean shelf gradient indicate that the geometry of the shelf might control the establishment and preservation of barrier-island environments in incised valleys located on the shelf. (v) Correlations between the width of coastal-plain IVFs and present-day mean tidal range at the shoreline indicate that tidal dynamics may contribute to the widening of the incised valleys. Positive correlation is observed between the proportion of tide-dominated elements in highstand IVF deposits and IVF width, suggesting possible effects of interplays between hydrodynamic conditions and the geometry of incised valleys on their infills.This study highlights the complexity of the internal fills of incised valleys, which must be considered when attempting the application of facies models of IVFs to rock-record interpretations or as predictive tools in subsurface studies.

Highlights

  • Incised valleys are fluvially eroded, elongate palaeotopographic lows developed in shelf and coastal settings during episodes of relative sea-level fall, and subsequently inundated, infilled and reworked by fluvial, coastal and marine processes during sea-level rise (Posamentier and Allen, 1999; Dalrymple and Zaitlin, 1994; Blum et al, 2013)

  • The sedimentary architecture of incised-valley fills that sit beneath present-day coastal plains and of those that occur on continental shelves are expected to differ, with respect to the extent to which the different systems tracts are preserved in the valley fill, and in the abundance of architectural-element types and its variation through systems tracts (Dalrymple et al, 1992; Allen and Posamentier, 1993, 1994b; Zaitlin et al 1994; Blum et al, 2013)

  • Coastal-plain incised valleys The ratio between the thickness of deposits belonging to a certain systems tract in the valley fill and the thickness of the valley fill itself (‘systems tract-to-valley-fill thickness ratio’, or ‘thickness ratio’, hereafter) is taken as an estimation of the proportion of the systems tract in the incised-valley fill

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Incised valleys are fluvially eroded, elongate palaeotopographic lows developed in shelf and coastal settings during episodes of relative sea-level fall, and subsequently inundated, infilled and reworked by fluvial, coastal and marine processes during sea-level rise (Posamentier and Allen, 1999; Dalrymple and Zaitlin, 1994; Blum et al, 2013). The fills of incised valleys represent critical stratigraphic archives of environmental change in coastal regions, in response to changes in sea level and climate They are especially important in this regard as adjacent shelf areas commonly store a less complete sedimentary record because of physical reworking and/or sediment starvation (Boyd et al, 2006; Simms et al, 2010; Mattheus and Rodriguez, 2011). For this reason, the fills of incised valleys have been the subject of detailed sequence stratigraphic analyses (e.g., Lin et al, 2005; Dalrymple, 2006; Chaumillon et al, 2010). In many present-day settings, estuaries and rias that commonly develop at the mouths of incised valleys during sea-level rise, accommodate large and dense human populations and constitute fragile coastal settings of primary economic and ecological importance (Kennish, 1991; Chaumillon et al, 2010; Zhang et al, 2014; Marlianingrum et al, 2019)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call