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Published byMichael McKenzie Modified over 6 years ago
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Evolution of Earths Environments: Preservation of Sedimentary Environments as Stratigraphy
What are the main sites of sediment accumulation on the globe? What evidence can we use to distinguish different environments in the stratigraphic record? How do environments get preserved through time? What impact does this have for the stratigraphic record?
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Where is the preservation potential of sediment highest?
Is this reflected in the stratigraphic record?
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Global denudation rates
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Sediment discharge from
the continents has also changed through time
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Global climate change
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How do even the biggest outcrops of stratigraphy in the world record such vast piles of sediment through time?
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How do we reconstruct ancient environments from such minimal preservation?
We use our understanding of sedimentary processes and how they characterise certain environments
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Sedimentary structures that record environment-specific processes.
Wave ripples, wind-ripples Mud-cracks Rootlets footprints
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Modern mud-cracks only found
In areas of periodic drying e.g. Deserts and intertidal mud flats.
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Modern (left) and fossilised ancient (right) ripples generated by waves
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Modern arid Floodplains where soils contain nodules of calcium carbonate due to seasonal drying
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Calcrete accumulated on arid floodplain
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Fossils are very important tool
Footprints Roots Fossils
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Modern (left) and fossil ancient (right) roots
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Fossil footprints
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Fossil plankton preserved in marine mudstones
Globigerina
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But, we need to understand how these environments get preserved in three dimensions
Predict geometries is important for fossil fuels such as coal Also important for understanding fluid flow in aquifers and in oil and gas reservoirs Also important for quarrying More on this next week………
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Rates of burial in different sedimentary environments
Rates depend on whether the ground surface is subsiding and the mechanism that generates the subsidence Sedimentary Basins are those regions of the globe where sediment accumulates on the long-term– next lecture Rates range from 0.1 to a few mm/yr (which is same as km/million yrs)
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Environments do not get preserved as they look today
Environments shift laterally faster than they subside. Erosion and reworking of previously deposited material is common Examples of rivers and coastlines
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Example of meandering rivers
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Eocene Montana Sandstones, Tremp Basin,Spanish Pyrenees
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Example from present coastlines
North Carolina, US
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Cape Hatteras, N. Carolina
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Chesil Beach, Dorset UK
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Peat and fossil trees underlying beach sands, UK
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Peat underlying beach sands, Coney Island New York
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This is the basis of Walther’s Law
The sediments that accumulate in different environments end up overlying each other. But – they are often separated by surfaces that must represent part of the environment that is erosional (e.g. many beaches and outer bends of rivers). This is the basis of Walther’s Law
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Walther’s Law A conformable succession of sedimentary layers represents a neighbouring set of coeval sedimentary environments. But, abrupt surfaces in a succession may represent erosion, and may superimpose two spatially separated environments. Next lecture – punctuated stratigraphy, unconformities and catastrophism versus gradualism in geologic time
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