Inner-Shelf Shoal Formation Through Transgressive Barrier
Submergence
Shea Penland, John R. Suter, Ron Boyd
Shore-parallel sand shoals are common depositional features on the
continental shelves of North America and make up a significant component of the
stratigraphic record generated by the Holocene transgression. Erosional
shoreface retreat and in-place drowning of barrier
shorelines are models that
have been proposed to explain the generation of these deposits. Sand shoals
within the retreat path of the Holocene Mississippi River delta plain were
investigated using high-resolution seismic profiles and vibracores to determine
their stratigraphic development and to test the models proposed for inner-shelf
shoal formation. Ship Shoal is a shore-parallel sand body 50 km long with a
relief of 3-5 m and is migrating landward 10-15 m/year in surrounding water
depths of 7-15 m. The hoal lies disconformably over regressive deposits of the
Maringouin delta, transgressed 6,000 years ago. Reworked beach rock, Crassostrea
sp. shell, and Rangia sp. shell, along with lagoonal mud, attest to the former
existence of
barrier
shoreline environments. No in-situ
barrier
shoreline
deposits were found within the shoal sand body. These data indicate Ship Shoal
is a shelf sand body sourced from the erosion of a former
barrier
shoreline.
Trinity Shoal is a landward migrating, shore parallel, lunate sand body
associated with the abandoned Teche delta, transgressed about 3,500 years ago.
Lying in 7-10 m of water, with an inner shelf relief of 2-4 m, Trinity Shoal is
a 5-7 thick sand body lying disconformably over regressive Teche delta deposits.
Interpreted high-resolution seismic pro iles identified the existence of tidal
inlet channels within the shoal sand body, indicating Trinity Shoal is cored by
in-situ deposits representing the platform of a former
barrier
shoreline.
The current transgressive barrier
models of erosional shoreface retreat and
in-place drowning do not adequately explain the morphology or stratigraphy of
Mississippi delta inner-shelf shoals. Formation of these shoals is a three-step
process: (1)
barrier
island transgression, (2)
barrier
island submergence, and
(3) inner-shelf shoal reworking. This process operates through multiple
mechanisms that cannot be attributed to one particular model or catastrophic
event. We propose Trinity Shoal and Ship Shoal formed through the process of
transgressive
barrier
submergence, which integrates the mechanisms of shoreface
erosion and relative sea level rise within the concept of coastal submergence.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91043©1986 AAPG Annual Convention, Atlanta, Georgia, June 15-18, 1986.