4.4 Article

The full range of turbidite bed thickness patterns in submarine lobes: controls and implications

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY
Volume 170, Issue 1, Pages 209-214

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC PUBL HOUSE
DOI: 10.1144/jgs2012-056

Keywords

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Funding

  1. LOBE project consortium
  2. Anadarko
  3. BHP Biliton
  4. BP
  5. Chevron
  6. DONG
  7. Maersk Oil
  8. Marathon
  9. Petrobras
  10. PetroSA
  11. Shell
  12. Statoil
  13. Total
  14. VNG Norge
  15. Woodside

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A widely misused criterion to interpret lobe deposits in submarine fan systems at outcrop, and in core and well logs, is a thickening and/or coarsening upward profile. Lobe deposits from the Laingsburg depocentre, SW Karoo Basin, demonstrate that a full range of bed thickness patterns exists within lobes. When lobes are defined by their laterally extensive bounding surfaces that are marked by abrupt facies changes, five types of bed stacking patterns are identified: thickening upward, thinning upward, thickening then thinning upward, thinning then thickening upward, and constant. The abrupt bounding surfaces are interpreted to record avulsion of feeder distributive channels. The stratigraphic bed thickness pattern preserved in a lobe reflects the internal organization of smaller-scale lobe elements, rather than lobe-wide initiation and progradation as implied by a thickening-upward only pattern. The full range of bed thickness patterns in lobes can be used to understand the stacking of lobe elements, the evolution of sediment deposition through time and space, and the relative movement of depocentres.

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