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Sedimentology and lithostratigraphy of Upper Eocene sponge-rich sediments, southern Western Australia.

Authors :
Gammon, P. R.
James, N. P.
Clarke, J. D. A.
Bone, Y.
Source :
Australian Journal of Earth Sciences. Dec2000, Vol. 47 Issue 6, p1087-1103. 17p.
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

Late Eocene time in the Bremer and western Eucla Basins of southern Western Australia was a period of terrigenous clastic and abundant, unusual, biosiliceous sponge sedimentation. The Pallinup Formation (revised) consists of five units; 1 and 2 are basal sandstones, 3 and 4 are variably spiculitic mudstones, whilst the uppermost unit is spiculite and spongolite, and formalised as the Fitzgerald Member (new). The Pallinup Formation, plus coeval spiculites in palaeovalleys and carbonates in the western Eucla Basin, accumulated during one large-scale, transgressive–regressive relative sea-level cycle. Drowned, low-gradient rivers supplied mud but little sand. Instead, sand was locally sourced via transgressive shoreface erosion of deeply weathered regolith. Regression terminated shoreface erosion, eliminated the sand source, and resulted in a river-supplied, clay-dominated shallow-marine depositional system. The unit 2–3 sandstone–mudstone transition, which would normally be interpreted as transgressive drowning, is in this case the result of regressive cessation of sand supply. The peak relative sea-level (highstand) horizon thus lies within unit 2 sandstones, a facies that would usually be considered wholly transgressive, and no highstand systems tract was deposited. The maximum flooding and downlap surfaces are the same horizon and cap the transgressive systems tract. They formed coincidentally or subsequent to peak relative sea-level, but prior to initiation of unit 3 mudstone deposition. Upper unit 2 plus unit 3 represent a condensed section systems tract, and unit 4 plus the Fitzgerald Member comprise a regressive systems tract. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08120099
Volume :
47
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Australian Journal of Earth Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
5470522
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1440-0952.2000.00835.x