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Downlap
Surface
Hemipelagic sediments
Highstand Systems Tract
Maximum Flooding Surface (mfs)
Pelagic sediments
Progradation
Transgressive Surface
Transgressive Systems Tract

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A thin marine stratigraphic
interval characterized by very slow depositional rates (<1-10 mm/yr)
(Vail et al., 1984).
A condensed section often consists of hemipelagic and pelagic sediments, starved of indigenous
materials, and deposited on the middle to outer shelf, slope, and basin floor
during a period of maximum relative sea-level rise and maximum transgression
of the shoreline. Because the clastic sedimentation rates are starved of the sediment from the continental margin, the skeletal remains of pelagic fauna preferentially accumulate to form condensed layers of fauna. These condensed layers of fauna are often used as paleomarkers of time. Examples of condensed pelagic fauna used in this way include graptolites, conodonts, goniatites, ammonites and foraminifera. Initially the condensed sections are seen to accumulate in more distal slope and basinal
settings, but as the shoreline backsteps landward during the sea level rise of a transgression so the condensed sections may gradually expand
in their coverage to include not only the basin but all of the slope and
part of the shelf as well (T.S. Loutit, et al., 1988).
Condensed sections are often used as markers during sequence stratigraphic analysis. This is because commonly the upper layer of
the Transgressive Systems Tract forms a condensed section which is associated
with the mfs where it is overlain by the downlapping Highstand Systems
Tract. Sometimes the transgressive surface marking the base of the Trangressive
Systems Tract is immediately overlain by a condensed section that is in
turn capped by the mfs. High gamma signals in well logs are often associated with condensed sections; the radioactive elements that cause this signal were sequestered by the organic matter (often cyanobacteria and phytoplankton) that accumulated preferentially as the clastic input from the basin margin decreased.
In conclusion condensed sections and sequences, their condensed pelagic fauna and high gamma ray signal form common time markers for sequence stratigraphic analysis and are equated with maximum flooding surfaces.
References
Loutit, T.S., Hardenbol, J., Vail, P.R., Baum, G.R., 1988, Condensed sections: the key to age-dating and correlation of continental margin sequences. In: Wilgus, C.K., Hastings, B.S., Kendall, C.G.St.C., Posamentier, H.W., Ross, C.A., Van Wagoner, J.C. (Eds.), Sea Level Changes––An Integrated Approach, vol. 42. SEPM Special Publication, pp. 183–213.
Vail, P.R., Hardenbol, J., Todd, R.G., 1984, Jurassic unconformities, chronostratigraphy and sea-level changes from seismic stratigraphy and biostratigraphy. In: Schlee, J.S. (Ed.), Interregional Unconformities and Hydrocarbon Accumulation, vol. 36. American
Association of Petroleum Geologists Memoir, pp. 129–144.
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