Publication Date:
2011-09-01
Description:
Few studies describe and compare the transport mechanisms operating to disperse mud in different parts of basins. Instead, the physical processes operating to disperse mud in offshore environments, where storm and tidal processes are interpreted to dominate, are generally considered in isolation from those occurring in basinal settings where changes in bottom-water anoxia and suspension settling from buoyant plumes are mostly interpreted to dominate. Using microtextural, mineralogical and geochemical data derived from the analyses of 151 thin sections obtained from the Lower Jurassic mudstone-dominated succession exposed on the coast of NE England, we investigate how varying sediment dispersal mechanisms, bioturbation and early diagenesis operated to produce the lithofacies variability observed. In particular, we consider the processes of sediment delivery while bottom waters were interpreted to be euxinic. Analyses of these samples reveal that the succession is highly variable at millimetre to centimetre scales. Six main lithofacies were observed: (1) sand- and clay-bearing, silt-rich mudstones; (2) silt-bearing, clay-rich mudstones; (3) clay-rich mudstones; (4) clay-, calcareous nannoplankton-, and organic carbon-bearing mudstones; (5) fine-grained muddy sandstones; (6) cement-rich mudstones. These units are organized typically into stacked successions of sharp-based, normally graded, thin (
Print ISSN:
0016-7649
Topics:
Geosciences
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