--> Stratigraphic Analyses of the Brazos Delta and Implications for Recognition, by M. Hamilton and J. B. Anderson; #90986 (1994).
[First Hit]

Datapages, Inc.Print this page

Abstract: Stratigraphic Analyses of the Brazos Delta and Implications for Recognition

Michael Hamilton, John B. Anderson

According to numerous outcrop studies, the stratigraphic sequence for Previous HitwaveNext Hit-dominated deltas possesses much of the same sedimentological signature as adjacent shoreface environments. Analysis of the modern Brazos delta reveals, however, a more complex facies architecture. Several vibracore transects from the delta and its shoreface indicate significant differences in depositional patterns. The most distinguishable differences are total sediment thickness, extent of bioturbation, abundance of sedimentological structures and gross lithologies. In all, the distinction between shoreface and Previous HitwaveNext Hit-dominated delta facies is attributable to episodic and significant fluvial input into the delta.

Preservation potential of these deposits is also addressed with reference to preserved shelf sand bodies of the ancestral Brazos delta Although preservation potential during an overall transgression is low, deposition of Previous HitwaveNext Hit-dominated deltaic sediments below Previous HitwaveNext Hit base and during different eustatic regimes is known to have occurred.

Finally, the historical development of the Brazos delta suggests that deltaic classification schemes denote ideal conditions, and distinction between fluvial domination and Previous HitwaveNext Hit domination is less apparent. We present here a depositional model implicating alternating periods of fluvial-dominated and Previous HitwaveTop-dominated sediment distribution within a single depositional lobe.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90986©1994 AAPG Annual Convention, Denver, Colorado, June 12-15, 1994