seqstrat_importance
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seqstrat_importance [20/03/2023 13:27] – mike_gss | seqstrat_importance [29/05/2023 14:59] (current) – mike_gss | ||
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==== Why Is Sequence Stratigraphy Important? ==== | ==== Why Is Sequence Stratigraphy Important? ==== | ||
- | | + | Sequence Stratigraphy is a way of classifying and arranging sediments based on the relative position of sea level at the time of deposition. Because global eustatic sea level change is cyclic, it is predictable, |
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+ | Systems Tracts are a series of linked contemporaneous depositional systems with all sediments deposited subject to a constant regime of relative sea level. Systems Tracks build the rock record, Sequence Surfaces are used to correlate it. | ||
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+ | The predictive nature of the subject affords great potential for exploration and appraisal because it increases confidence on what may lie in areas without direct data availability. In simplistic terms, during sea-levels falls landscapes are exhumed and eroded. The products of erosion have to go somewhere - where? Sequence modelling gives us insights where the depositional systems are, how far they extend and the channelling involved and therefore we can predict where the products of erosion (usually expressed by the development of submarine far sands - potentially very good reservoirs) will occur. In summary: | ||
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* It relies on the analysis of changes in depositional facies and geometry of strata and the identification of key surfaces which allows the chronological order of basin filling and erosional events to be determined. | * It relies on the analysis of changes in depositional facies and geometry of strata and the identification of key surfaces which allows the chronological order of basin filling and erosional events to be determined. | ||
* Sediments are classified into packages based on the regime of relative sea level they were deposited under (see figure below), rather than relying on lithostratigraphic terms to classify sediments. | * Sediments are classified into packages based on the regime of relative sea level they were deposited under (see figure below), rather than relying on lithostratigraphic terms to classify sediments. | ||
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//Schematic view of a sequence in a clastic environment. The figure at the top is drawn according to rock thickness. Sediments are grouped together in packages (“systems tracts”) deposited during phases of sea-level cyclicity, separated by different sequence surfaces. The lower image shows the same packages and surfaces, this time drawn according to the (upwards) passage of time. Such images form the basis for Chronostratigraphic Charts.// | //Schematic view of a sequence in a clastic environment. The figure at the top is drawn according to rock thickness. Sediments are grouped together in packages (“systems tracts”) deposited during phases of sea-level cyclicity, separated by different sequence surfaces. The lower image shows the same packages and surfaces, this time drawn according to the (upwards) passage of time. Such images form the basis for Chronostratigraphic Charts.// | ||
- | Essentially it is a way of classifying and arranging sediments based on the relative | + | The **// |
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+ | //Facies from separate lateral sections (upper image: green - organic rich deep water sediments; dark brown - deep water fine clastics; light brown - shallow water fine clastics; yellow - shallow water coarse clastics) can be interpreted in terms of " | ||
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- | Systems Tracts are a series of linked contemporaneous depositional systems with all sediments deposited subject to a constant regime of relative sea level. Systems Tracks build the rock record, Sequence Surfaces are used to correlate it. | ||
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seqstrat_importance.1679318859.txt.gz · Last modified: 20/03/2023 13:27 by mike_gss