--> ABSTRACT: Late Pleistocene Sequence Stratigraphy of the New Jersey Continental Shelf, by John S. Carey, Robert E. Sheridan, Gail M. Ashley; #91020 (1995).
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Late Pleistocene Sequence Stratigraphy of the New Jersey Continental Shelf

John S. Carey, Robert E. Sheridan, Gail M. Ashley

High-resolution reflection profiles over a 25000 km2 area off New Jersey illustrate the effects of high amplitude, high frequency eustasy on a slowly subsiding passive margin. Vibracores and USGS AMCOR project drill holes and geophysical well logs provide age and lithologic control for the sequences identified from 1600 km of GeopulseTM, UniboomTM, MinisparkerTM, and Previous HitairNext Hit Previous HitgunTop profiles. Analysis of the data reveal four depositional sequences controlled by late Quaternary (past 140 ka) sea-level fluctuations of up to 120m that are tentatively correlated with the ^dgr18O stages. The base of Sequence I is a major unconformity associated with a gravel layer at -80 m in AMCOR 6020, lying at -230 m at the shelf edge and overl in by the Emiliania huxleyi zone indicating a post-Stage 8 age; the unconformity was likely cut during Stage 6 (~140 ka). The highstand tract (HST) of this sequence reaches +5-10m in the Cape May Formation (Stage 5e, ~125 ka). The elevation of lowstand wedge (LSW) sediments in Sequence II indicates a drop in sea level to ~-75 m, possibly during Stage 4 (~75 ka). The overlying HST deposits include a barrier island shoreline indicating sea level at ~-20m. An Astarte shell from this unit produced amino acid ratios consistent with an early Stage 3 age (~ 55 ka). The Sequence III LSW implies a drop in sea level to about -60 m, during which time a paleo-Hudson River cut southward across the shelf. The associated baymouth shoal complex suggests a maximum late Stage 3 (~ 35 ka) transgression to an elevaton of -35 m. Sequence IV is bounded by the Stage 2 (~ 18 ka) lowstand unconformity cut to a deph of ~120m and includes the latest Pleistocene-Holocene transgressive sediments. The elevation of the Stage 2 lowstand deepens northwards because of glacio-isostatic adjustment. High amplitude fluctuations (~120m) such as Sequence I and Sequence IV are more laterally continuous; the record of lower amplitude fluctuations (20-60m) is preserved only on the mid-shelf. Fragmentary preservation of high-order sequences can complicate sequence stratigraphic interpretation.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91020©1995 AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, May 5-8, 1995