Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin...

14
Carbonate Platforms

Transcript of Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin...

Page 1: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

Carbonate Platforms

Page 2: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

RECAP: Carbonate Ramps

Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to siliciclastic shelf

Highest

Energy

Lowest

Energy

Page 3: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

Carbonate Platforms

Low-gradient to flat, shallow, broad top with very steep slope

May have platform-edge barrier (reef or shoals)

Page 4: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

Where is the energy maximum?

Frictional energy loss

Platform-edge energy maxBeach

energy max

Quiet-water lagoonFore-reef energy max

Page 5: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

Platform interior

Slope and Basin

Platform Margin Shoals

Platform margin facies: Great Bahama Bank

Page 6: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

Skeletal grainstone margin

Localized ooid grainstone shoals

Grainstone marginPackstone/wackestone interior

Page 7: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

Platform-margin shoals of ooid or skeletal grainstone

Spillover sediment transport in windward direction

Page 8: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

Planar cross-bedded shoal facies over lagoonal facies

Page 9: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

Platform Interior Facies

Open platform peloidal grainstone

Protected peloidal packstone/wackestone

Page 10: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

Characteristic meter-scale cyclicity in platform interior

Shallowing-upwards from subtidal to supratidal

Upper Triassic, Italy

Page 11: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

Cycles may be allocyclic, driven by rising base level and creation of accommodation space for sediment accumulation

Typical carbonate accumulate rates are very high (> base level rise), so rapidly fill accommodation space and shallow upward

Page 12: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

Exposure (karst) surface (Carboniferous, Nevada)

Primary relief on surface mantled and infilled by subsequent deposition

Page 13: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

Cycles may also be autocyclic (properties inherent to the carbonate factory)

High shallow subtidal sedimentation rates = carbonate factory tends to aggrade rapidly to sea level

Carbonate production slows as sediments near sea level

Page 14: Carbonate Platforms. RECAP: Carbonate Ramps Consistent shallow gradient from shoreline to basin (some may be distally steepened), somewhat analogous to.

May require “lag time” where carbonate sedimentation is slow or absent during early part of base level rise

Cycles are strongly asymmetrical – thin to absent retrogradational facies, thick progradational facies