|
Introduction
To Sequence Stratigraphy - The Basics

Other "On Line Lectures" on sequence stratigraphy can be accessed by clicking on the highlighted text.
The purpose of this page is to provide access to a chalk board lecture
that is focused on the ideal Vail et al 1977
sequence,
and considers this in terms of the component system
tracts, and their gross geometries as products of changes
in relative
sea level (base
level) and the evolving accommodation' space.
This video taped lecture
introduces the concepts of sequence stratigraphy from the perspective
of evolving sediment geometry through time and relative
sea level changes. The geological setting described in the lecture
is hypothetical, and represents the first of a series of other hypothetical
and real geological examples of clastic and carbonate sequences
that are described in the pages that follow.

The
movie makes the following points:
The lecture seen in the
movie involves a geologic model that makes the following assumptions::
- Sea level position
varied
- Subsidence was constant
- Sediment supply was
constant
The sequence is divided
by surfaces system
tracts. Each systems tract is represented by a collection
of the sediments of the associated sedimentary depositional
systems that were active during the different phases
of base level change. Thus system tract sediments can be considered
as sedimentary units that were deposited synchronously and can be
mapped as being enclosed by continuous surfaces that extend from
sub-aerial and to sub-aqueous settings.
The systems tracts defined
in order of deposition to form the ideal sequence are:
- Early Phase Lowstand
System Tract
- Late Phase Lowstand
Systems Tract
- Transgressive Systems
Tract
- Highstand Systems
Tract
Early
Phase Lowstand System Tract is associated with:
- Falling stage of
relative sea level induced by eustasy falling rapidly and/or tectonic
uplift outpacing the rate of change in sea level position
- Fluvial incision
up dip with formation of an unconformity or sequence boundary
and the focus of sediment input at the shoreline
- Forced
regressions induced by the lack of accommodation producing
stacking patterns of downward stepping prograding clinoforms over
the condensed section formed during the previous transgressive
and highstand systems tracts
- Slope instability
caused by the rapid deposition of sediment from the fluvial systems
- Basin
floor fans formed from sediment transported from the
shelf margin when this fails under the weight of the rapid sediment
accumulation associated with the forced regression
- Shelf
margin and slope
fans form when rates of sedimentation slows and slope
instability is reduced so sediment is not displaced so far downslope
- Onlap of sediments
onto the prograding clinoforms below the shelf break
- The lower bounding
surfaces of the Early
Phase Lowstand System Tract are the updip unconformity
and the top of the downdip condensed section. These surfaces form
by different mechanisms and have different time significance
- The top of the downdip
condensed section immediately underlies the downlapping prograding
clinoforms of the forced regression
- The top of the Early
Phase Lowstand System Tract in theory is marked
by an initial onlap onto the often eroded surface of the prograding
clinoforms of the forced regression
Late
Phase Lowstand Systems Tract is associated with:
- A slow relative sea
level rise is induced when eustasy begins to rise slowly and/or
tectonic uplift slows
- Sediment is now outpaced
by an increase in accommodation and in response the sediment begins
to onlap onto the basin margin
- River profiles stabilize
- Valleys backfill
- Prograding
lowstand clinoforms
form and are capped by topset
layers that onlap,
aggrade,
become thicker upward and landward
Transgressive
Systems Tract is associated with:
- A rapid relative sea
level rise above the shelf margin occurs when eustasy begins to
rise rapidly, exceeding the effects of any tectonic uplift
- Condensed
sequences are often composed of sediment layers rich
in the tests of fauna that are no longer masked by sediment accumulation
because sedimentation rates are very slow in response to the greater
area of sea floor exposed to sedimentation
- Ravinement
erosion surface formed when the transgressing sea reworks either
the prior sequence boundary or the sediments that may have collected
during the forced regression that may have followed the formation
of that sequence boundary.
- Maximum
flooding surface forms when the last fine-grained widespread
transgressive sediment collects before the High Stand builds out
over it.
Highstand
Systems Tract is associated with:
- Slow rise of relative
sea level followed by a slow fall; essentially a still stand of
base level when the slower rate eustatic change balances that
of tectonic motion
- Sediment outpacing
loss of accommodation
- River Profiles stabilize
- River valleys are
dispersed laterally in a position landward of the shelf margin.
- Prograding highstand
clinoforms develop capped by aggrading topsets that become thinner
upward.
To view carbonates and
clastics with different inputs we refer you to the Quick Time Movies
on our page.
|