--> Abstract: New Depositional Model for the Mississippi River Delta Plain, by S. Penland, J. R. Suter, R. A. McBride, and R. Boyd; #91006 (1991)
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New Depositional Model for the Mississippi River Previous HitDeltaNext Hit Previous HitPlainNext Hit

PENLAND, SHEA, Louisiana Geological Survey, Baton Rouge, LA, JOHN R. SUTER, Exxon Production Research, Houston, TX, RANDOLPH A. McBRIDE, Louisiana Geological Survey, Baton Rouge, LA, and RON BOYD, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

Coastal Louisiana has long served as a laboratory for Previous HitdeltaNext Hit and chenier Previous HitplainNext Hit research due to the presence of North America's largest river, the Mississippi. The current Mississippi River Previous HitdeltaNext Hit model depicts a single Holocene Previous HitdeltaNext Hit Previous HitplainNext Hit consisting of five Previous HitdeltaNext Hit complexes sequentially deposited over the last 7000 years by the Previous HitdeltaNext Hit switching process. With the acquisition and integration of an extensive onshore and offshore seismic, vibracore, and radiocarbon database, the Holocene Previous HitdeltaNext Hit Previous HitplainNext Hit is now interpreted as consisting of two separate Previous HitdeltaNext Hit plains developed at different sea level positions. Termed the Modern and late Holocene, these two Previous HitdeltaNext Hit plains are separated by a regional ravinement surface several

hundred kilometers along strike in extent and bounded updip by a relict shoreline of maximum transgression, the Teche shoreline. The late Holocene Previous HitdeltaNext Hit Previous HitplainNext Hit consists of a set of Previous HitdeltaNext Hit complexes deposited during a slow relative sea level rise some 5-6 m below the present, ~4000-7000 years ago. An increase in the rate of relative sea level rise between 3000-4000 years ago to about present sea level led to the transgressive submergence of the distal late Holocene Previous HitdeltaNext Hit Previous HitplainNext Hit, generating Trinity Shoal, Ship Shoal, and the Teche shoreline. The Modern Previous HitdeltaNext Hit Previous HitplainNext Hit began building seaward of the Teche shoreline about 3000 years ago during a second period of slow relative sea level rise induced primarily by subsidence. The St. Bernard and Lafourche Previous HitdeltaNext Hit complexes and associated transgressive shorelines represent the abandoned parts of the Modern birdfoot Previous HitdeltaNext Hit Previous HitplainNext Hit, separated from the underlying late Holocene Previous HitdeltaNext Hit Previous HitplainNext Hit by the regional Teche ravinement surface. The Modern and Atchafalaya Previous HitdeltaNext Hit complexes are currently active. In sequence stratigraphic terms, each composite Previous HitdeltaNext Hit Previous HitplainNext Hit represents a set of parasequences bounded by transgressive surfaces of erosion which include ravinement and marine flooding surfaces. The late Holocene Previous HitdeltaNext Hit Previous HitplainNext Hit occurs within a transgressive systems tract and is separated from the overlying Modern Previous HitdeltaNext Hit Previous HitplainTop in a highstand systems tract by a maximum flooding surface.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91006 © 1991 GCAGS and GC-SEPM Meeting, Houston, Texas, October 16-18, 1991 (2009)