TY - JOUR
T1 - Discriminating stacked distributary channel from palaeovalley fill sand bodies in foreland basin settings
AU - Burnham, Brian
AU - Jerrett, Rhodri
AU - Hodgetts, David
AU - Flint, Stephen
N1 - The authors thank and acknowledge Total S.A. for funding the research that lead to the presented work. The authors would like to further thank Georgina Heldreich and Rachel Harding for providing useful comments on an early draft of the manuscript. Finally, the authors kindly and appreciatively thank and acknowledge Janok Bhattacharya and an anonymous reviewer, and Chief Editor Jasper Knight for their constructive reviews and feedback.
PY - 2020/3/15
Y1 - 2020/3/15
N2 - Stacked fluvial distributary channel deposits and palaeovalley fills can form major, multi storey sand bodies with similar thicknesses, and with lateral extents often greater than a single exposure. Consequently, they can be difficult to tell apart from one another using outcrop data. This study addresses this problem by quantitatively analysing the architecture of five stacked fluvial distributary channel deposits and two palaeovalley fills from the Pennsylvanian Pikeville and Hyden formations of the central Appalachian Basin, USA. The a priori interpretation of the sand bodies as stacked distributary channels and palaeovalley fills is possible because a robust in-place coal seam correlation framework allows for the recognition of different basin-scale architectures for each type – aspect ratios <1000 and envelopes of fluvial and deltaic strata for stacked distributary channels, and aspect ratios >1000 and a regional basinward facies shift at the bases of palaeovalley fills. Sand body thickness, storey thickness, position and length of storey contacts within the sand body are similar in both types. However, they can be distinguished by different up-system to down-system changes in their respective architectures. Stacked distributary channel sand bodies thin down system, display a decrease in storey thickness, an increase in the mean position of storey heights in the sand body and a decrease in the length of storey contacts. These trends are the result of down-system decrease in channel size, and confinement associated with radially distributive fluvial systems. Palaeovalley fill sand bodies thicken down-system, display an increase in storey thickness, a decrease in the mean position of storey heights, and a decrease in the length of storey contacts. The increase in sand body and storey thickness are the result of down-system increases in original channel size, consistent with trunk axial fluvial systems fed by tributaries that predominate during valley-formation. The down-system increase in amalgamation reflects a down-system decrease in accommodation, from the higher subsidence rate active margin of the basin, and is therefore not necessarily characteristic of palaeovalley fill architectures in all basin settings. This study emphasises the requirement for detailed correlation work and quantitative analysis of external and internal architectures before the interpretation of sand bodies as stacked distributary channels or palaeovalley fills.
AB - Stacked fluvial distributary channel deposits and palaeovalley fills can form major, multi storey sand bodies with similar thicknesses, and with lateral extents often greater than a single exposure. Consequently, they can be difficult to tell apart from one another using outcrop data. This study addresses this problem by quantitatively analysing the architecture of five stacked fluvial distributary channel deposits and two palaeovalley fills from the Pennsylvanian Pikeville and Hyden formations of the central Appalachian Basin, USA. The a priori interpretation of the sand bodies as stacked distributary channels and palaeovalley fills is possible because a robust in-place coal seam correlation framework allows for the recognition of different basin-scale architectures for each type – aspect ratios <1000 and envelopes of fluvial and deltaic strata for stacked distributary channels, and aspect ratios >1000 and a regional basinward facies shift at the bases of palaeovalley fills. Sand body thickness, storey thickness, position and length of storey contacts within the sand body are similar in both types. However, they can be distinguished by different up-system to down-system changes in their respective architectures. Stacked distributary channel sand bodies thin down system, display a decrease in storey thickness, an increase in the mean position of storey heights in the sand body and a decrease in the length of storey contacts. These trends are the result of down-system decrease in channel size, and confinement associated with radially distributive fluvial systems. Palaeovalley fill sand bodies thicken down-system, display an increase in storey thickness, a decrease in the mean position of storey heights, and a decrease in the length of storey contacts. The increase in sand body and storey thickness are the result of down-system increases in original channel size, consistent with trunk axial fluvial systems fed by tributaries that predominate during valley-formation. The down-system increase in amalgamation reflects a down-system decrease in accommodation, from the higher subsidence rate active margin of the basin, and is therefore not necessarily characteristic of palaeovalley fill architectures in all basin settings. This study emphasises the requirement for detailed correlation work and quantitative analysis of external and internal architectures before the interpretation of sand bodies as stacked distributary channels or palaeovalley fills.
KW - 3D outcrop modelling
KW - Distributive Fluvial System
KW - Foreland basin
KW - Lidar
KW - Palaeovalley
KW - Quantitative characterisation
KW - DIGITAL OUTCROP MODELS
KW - FLUVIAL SYSTEMS
KW - SEA-LEVEL
KW - FACIES
KW - GEOMORPHIC ELEMENTS
KW - STRATIGRAPHY
KW - STATISTICAL-ANALYSIS
KW - SEDIMENTARY BASINS
KW - ARCHITECTURE
KW - EASTERN KENTUCKY
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sedgeo.2020.105592
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85078197741&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.sedgeo.2020.105592
DO - 10.1016/j.sedgeo.2020.105592
M3 - Article
VL - 398
SP - 1
EP - 13
JO - Sedimentary Geology
JF - Sedimentary Geology
SN - 0037-0738
M1 - 105592
ER -