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Clastic Marine Shelf Systems
(continental shelf/shallow marine/offshore)
Shelf Settings
Clastic shelves in the stratigraphic record mostly represent two settings, pericontinental (continental passive margin) and epicontinental (continental interior).
Shelf Processes
The interaction between waves (fairweather and storm), tides, and contrasts in water density creates a complex set of processes operating to transport sediment on the sea floor.
Geostrophic Currents
Geostrophic currents are set up by pressure gradients that cause flow along an isobar that curves away from the shoreline in response to the Coriollis Effect. In deeper water, they often move as a nepheloid flow of suspended sediment derived through hypopycnal flow, hyperpycnal flow, and storm surges.
Photo by W. W. Little
Storm-dominated Shelves
The interaction between waves (fairweather and storm), tides, and contrasts in water density creates a complex set of processes operating to transport sediment on the sea floor.
Photo by W. W. Little
Photo by W. W. Little
Wave/storm-dominated shelves ideally exhibit a transition from sands in the lower shoreface, to alternating sands and muds below fairweather wave base, to muddy facies below storm wave base.
Shoreline to Offshore Model
Wave-base
Wave base is the depth to which waves make contact with the sea floor.• Fair-weather wave base varies from approximately 5 to 15 m depth.•Storm wave base ranges from around 15 to 30 m depth.
Clastic marine shelves are flat and slope gently basinward, producing a graded profile in which deposits become finer-grained and less susceptible to wave activity away from the shoreline, reflecting an overall decrease in energy. The general pattern can be complicated by tide and submarine currents. Often, depositional relics remain from earlier base-level conditions.
Simplified Facies Model
Shanmugam 2008
Shanmugam 2000
More Complex Facies Model
Shore to Shelf Transition
Shelf sediment transport can be accomplished through quiet-water settling, storm waves, storm swells, tides, submarine currents, and bioturbation. The relative importance of these processes varies with distance from the shoreline, water depth, basin geometry, and sediment supply (type and abundance).
Heckel 1977
Photo by W. W. Little
Laminated mud forms by suspension settling and is preserved in abundance only below storm wave-base.
Laminated Mud
Photo by W. W. Little
Bioturbated Mud and Sand
Bioturbation is common in marine shelf deposits and can be expressed in a variety of forms that are indicative of water depth.
Hummocky Beds
Thin storm beds are scattered throughout the proximal portion of the marine shelf, becoming finer-grained basinward. Storm beds typically have erosional bases. Graded bedding, hummocky cross-bedding, gravel intraclasts, and shell concenrations are common structures.
Hummocky Cross-bedded Sand
Hummocky cross-bedded sand is produced during major storms and typically forms thin beds scattered through a predominantly muddy succession.
Photo by W. W. Little
Photo by W. W. Little
Photo by W. W. Little
Shell Beds
Shell beds accumulate during large storms. They typical have a sharp, erosional base and grade upward into overlying sand.
Photo by W. W. Little
Megaripples
Cross-bedding in storm beds is related to the migration of megaripples.
Large scale cross-bedding
Large scale cross-bedding diagram
Photo by W. W. Little
Limestone
Thin limestone beds are often scattered through the succession. These represent condensed intervals (unconformities) formed during sea-level highstands.
Photo by W. W. Little
Large-scale Architecture
Offshore marine deposits are often found in cyclical coarsening-upward successions with shoreline deposits. The marine deposits typically consist of monotonous laminated and bioturbated shales with increasingly common interbedded storm beds in the upward transition to shorface sediments.
Photo by W. W. Little
Offshore to Shoreface Succession
Photo by W. W. Little
Photo by W. W. Little
Offshore Zone
Photo by W. W. Little
Photo by W. W. Little
Offshore to Transition Zone
Photo by W. W. Little
Transition Zone to Shoreface
Photo by W. W. Little
EaES 455-6 34
EaES 455-6 35
Storm-dominated Shelf Profiles
A typical succession consists of interbedded quiet water and storm deposits. Quiet water sediments are consist mostly of bioturbated and laminated mud that can be glauconitic. Storm “beds” are typically erosional at the base and fine upward from intraclastic gravel, through trough cross-bedded sand to hummocky cross-bedded sand.
Shanmugam 2000
Tide-dominated Shelves
On shallow shelves in areas with high tidal ranges, subaqueous tidal currents can transport sand to create a variety of bedforms, depending upon tidal strength (current velocity) and sediment supply. These range from mud-draped dunes to sand waves to longitudinal ribbons to erosional surfaces with increasing current velocity. Tidal bedforms can be tens of meters high and several kilometers wide where sand is abundant. Storm beds can be interbedded with tidal deposits, and bioturbation can be well-developed.
Tidal Dunes
Tidal dunes can be complex, showing evidence of bidirectional flow internally, while maintaining their asymmetrical morphology demonstrating prevailing sediment transport direction. Reactivation surfaces are common.
Tide-dominated Shelf Profiles