4.4 Article

Sedimentology and basin-fill history of the Cenozoic succession of the Sylhet Trough, Bengal Basin, Bangladesh

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 110, Issue 1, Pages 193-212

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00531-020-01946-1

Keywords

Bengal Basin; Cenozoic succession; Facies assemblages; Depositional environment; Bounding discontinuity; Sequence stratigraphy

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology Bangladesh

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By conducting a detailed lithofacies analysis, the sedimentation and basin-fill history of the Sylhet Trough has been divided into three megasequences, each further divided into multiple lithostratigraphic units.
The Sylhet Trough, a petroleum province of the Bengal Basin, accommodates a huge thickness of Eocene to Recent sedimentary successions. However, the basin-fill history of the trough is poorly understood; specifically, constrains on timing of deposition of the individual units are yet to be established. Therefore, we aimed at establishing sedimentation and basin-fill history of the Sylhet Trough based on detailed lithofacies analysis of the outcropping Cenozoic succession. We have divided the entire Cenozoic succession into three megasequences which can be further sub-divided into nine lithostratigraphic units based on bounding discontinuities, such as transgressive erosion surface, regressive erosion surface, transgressive surface, marine flooding surface, and incised valley floor. The oldest is the Megasequence 1, comprised of shallow marine shelfal deposits overlain by shallow marine to nearshore deposits. In the middle, the Megasequence 2 is representing tide-dominated marine to coastal (deltaic) depositional systems with evidence of cyclic marine regression and transgression. Repetitive occurrence of incised channel, tidal inlet, tidal ridge/shoal, tidal flat and other tidal deposits are separated by shelfal deposits. The top of the Megasequence 2 is marked by a pronounced erosion surface interpreted as an incised valley floor indicating the final phase of marine regression followed by the gradual establishment of the overlying continental-fluvial depositional systems (i.e., the Megasequence 3). This youngest megasequence is characterized by stacked braided river sand bars that pass up-sequence into meandering river deposits. Based on the Cenozoic eustatic sea level curve, we suggest that the upper boundaries of the Megasequence 1 and Megasequence 2 are approximately at 39.5 Ma and 5.0 Ma, respectively.

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