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Coupled 'storm-flood' depositional model: Application to the Miocene-Modern Baram Delta Province, north-west Borneo.

Authors :
Collins, Daniel S.
Johnson, Howard D.
Allison, Peter A.
Guilpain, Pierre
Damit, Abdul Razak
Marzo, Mariano
Source :
Sedimentology. Aug2017, Vol. 64 Issue 5, p1203-1235. 33p. 2 Color Photographs, 1 Illustration, 4 Diagrams, 1 Chart, 1 Graph, 11 Maps.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The Miocene to Modern Baram Delta Province is a highly efficient source to sink system that has accumulated 9 to 12 km of coastal-deltaic to shelf sediments over the past 15 Myr. Facies analysis based on ca 1 km of total vertical outcrop stratigraphy, combined with subsurface geology and sedimentary processes in the present-day Baram Delta Province, suggests a 'storm-flood' depositional model comprising two distinct periods: (i) fair-weather periods are dominated by alongshore sediment reworking and coastal sand accumulation; and (ii) monsoon-driven storm periods are characterized by increased wave-energy and offshore-directed downwelling storm flow that occur simultaneously with peak fluvial discharge caused by storm precipitation ('storm-floods'). The modern equivalent environment has the following characteristics: (i) humid-tropical monsoonal climate; (ii) narrow ( ca <100 km) and steep ( ca 1°), densely vegetated, coastal plain; (iii) deep tropical weathering of a mudstone-dominated hinterland; (iv) multiple independent, small to moderate-sized (102 to 105 km2) drainage basins; (v) predominance of river-mouth bypassing; and (vi) supply-dominated shelf. The ancient, proximal part of this system (the onshore Belait Formation) is dominated by strongly cyclical sandier-upward successions (metre to decametre-scale) comprising (from bottom to top): (i) finely laminated mudstone with millimetre-scale silty laminae; (ii) heterolithic sandstone-mudstone alternations (centimetre to metre-scale); and (iii) sharp-based, swaley cross-stratified sandstone beds and bedsets (metre to decimetre-scale). Gutter casts (decimetre to metre-scale) are widespread, they are filled with swaley cross-stratified sandstone and their long axes are oriented perpendicular to the palaeo-shoreline. The gutter casts and other associated waning-flow event beds suggest that erosion and deposition was controlled by high-energy, offshore-directed, oscillatory-dominated, sediment-laden combined flows within a shoreface to delta front setting. The presence of multiple river mouths and exceptionally high rates of accommodation creation (characteristic of the Neogene to Recent Baram Delta Province; up to 3000 m Ma−1), in a 'storm-flood'-dominated environment, resulted in a highly efficient and effective offshore-directed sediment transport system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00370746
Volume :
64
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Sedimentology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
123909018
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/sed.12316