--> ABSTRACT: Depositional Geometries of an Avulsive Fluvial System Controlled by Peat Compaction (Neogene, Most Basin, Czech Republic), by Rajchl, Michal, David Ulicny; #90026 (2004)
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Rajchl, Michal1, David Ulicny2 
(1) Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic 
(2) Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czech Republic

ABSTRACT: Previous HitDepositionalNext Hit Geometries of an Avulsive Fluvial Previous HitSystemNext Hit Controlled by Peat Compaction (Neogene, Most Basin, Czech Republic)

Large-scale exposures in open-cast mines of the Most Basin (Oligocene-Miocene, Eger Graben, Czech Republic) allow to study the evolution of clastic Previous HitdepositionalNext Hit systems overlying an extensive, up to 45 m thick, lignite seam - especially their syn- and post-Previous HitdepositionalNext Hit interactions with the underlying accumulation of organic material. Deposits of a highly avulsive, mixed-load fluvial Previous HitsystemNext Hit in the Hrabák Mine display a number of characteristics similar to deposits of modern anastomosing systems. Two main processes controlled the evolution of the Hrabák fluvial Previous HitsystemNext Hit: (1) syndepositional compaction of the underlying peat and (2) avulsions of the whole floodplain belt. An idealised autogenic cycle of channel-belt evolution started by strong aggradation of the channel belt folloving avulsion, continued by a gradual increase in lateral migration due to decrease of the compaction potential, and was ended by channel-belt abandonment due to avulsion. Nodal avulsions affecting the whole fluvial Previous HitsystemNext Hit were probably concentrated at the margin of the peat swamp. The study shows that the occurrence of a basinwide peat swamp in an extensional basin has a profound effect on the geomorphic and sedimentological characteristics of the fluvial Previous HitsystemTop that enters the basin. Although the channel migration was not limited by peat growth as is some modern rivers, the extremely low gradient of the floodplain and differential compaction of peat beneath active floodplain belts were the main controls on channel migration and avulsion, at significantly shorter time scales than tectonic deformation.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90026©2004 AAPG Annual Meeting, Dallas, Texas, April 18-21, 2004.