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Quaternary incised valleys in southern Brazil coastal zone

Authors :
Cristiane Bahi dos Santos
Eduardo Calixto Bortolin
Iran Carlos Stalliviere Correa
Ricardo Baitelli
Jair Weschenfelder
Source :
Journal of South American Earth Sciences. 55:83-93
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2014.

Abstract

High-resolution seismic records obtained in the Rio Grande do Sul coastal zone, southern Brazil, revealed that prominent valleys and channels developed in the area before the installation of actual coastal plain. Landwards, the paleoincisions can be linked with the present courses of the main river dissecting the area. Oceanwards, they can be linked with related features previously recognized in the continental shelf and slope by means of seismic and morphostructural studies. Based mainly on seismic, core data and geologic reasoning, it can be inferred that the coastal valleys were incised during forced regression events into the coastal prism deposited during previous sea level highstand events of the Quaternary. Seismic data has revealed paleovalleys up to 10 km wide and, in some places, infilled with up to 40 m thick of sediments. The results indicated two distinct periods of cut-and-fill events in the Patos Lagoon area. The filling of the younger incision system is mainly Holocene and its onset is related to the last main regressive event of the Pleistocene, when the sea level fell about 130 m below the actual position. The older incision and filling event is related to the previous regressive–transgressive events of the Middle and Late Pleistocene. The fluvial discharge fed delta systems on the shelf edge during the sea level lowstands. The subsequent transgressions drowned the incised drainage, infilling it and closing the inlets formerly connecting the coastal river to the ocean. The incised features may have played a significant role on the basin-margin architecture, facies distribution and accommodation space during the multitude of up and down sea level events of the Quaternary.

Details

ISSN :
08959811
Volume :
55
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of South American Earth Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5fdcbe2b4778ee061bb3097a5055ac89