Sub-Milankovitch Cycles Established from High-
Resolution
Logs and Robust Chronostratigraphic Tuning: An Example from a Miocene
Sedimentary Sequence in the Vienna Basin
Paulissen, Wieske 1; Luthi, Stefan M.1
(1)
Department of Geotechnolgy, Delft University of Technology, Delft, Netherlands.
Through an integrated stratigraphic approach a high-resolution
chronostratigraphic record has been established that takes into account
variations in sedimentation rates and temporal gaps caused by unconformities
and faulting in a research borehole in the Vienna Basin. This
chronostratigraphic record was used to investigate the possible presence of
orbital, millennial and centennial periodicities. The sedimentary sequence
covers Middle to Late Miocene shallow marine, fluvio-deltaic and lacustrine
shales, silt- and sandstones deposited during the transition from a pull-apart basin
to the final infill in a compressional regime. Spectral analysis was performed
on gamma ray logs and high-
resolution
electrical borehole images using three
different analytical methods over six suitable intervals where continuous and
constant sedimentation was identified. The significant periods were found to
closely match the orbital cycles of precession, obliquity and short
eccentricity, providing a solid basis for the analysis of potential
sub-Milankovitch cycles. Moreover the very high vertical
resolution
of
electrical borehole images allowed for the recognition of millennial- to
centennial scale cycles, for example a sedimentation rate of 0.25 m/kyr
represents 40 years with an FMI
resolution
of 1 cm.
The significant frequencies encountered at the millennial- to centennial-scale fell for 75% within a relatively narrow time period of 0.25 to 5 kyr, with a concentration of peaks between 1 to 2 kyr (29%) and 500 to 800 yrs (17%). These periodicities relate closely to the millennial- (Dansgaard-Oeschger and Bond cycles) and centennial-scale climate cycles documented from the Quaternary. It is suggested that the high-frequency cycles observed in the Miocene of the Vienna Basin represent differences in grain size related to cyclic variations in regional precipitation. Through this integrated stratigraphic methodology our findings suggest that the infill of this Paratethyan basin can be seen as the result of three superposed processes, i.e. regional tectonism modulated by orbital influences and an additional component at the millennial- to centennial-scale.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90135©2011 AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Milan, Italy, 23-26 October 2011.