User Tools

Site Tools


seqstrat_mrs

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Next revision
Previous revision
seqstrat_mrs [20/03/2023 14:41] – created mike_gssseqstrat_mrs [20/03/2023 14:42] (current) mike_gss
Line 8: Line 8:
  
 //The MRS shown as a green line. It is immediately followed by deposition of the Transgressive Systems Tract (TST).// //The MRS shown as a green line. It is immediately followed by deposition of the Transgressive Systems Tract (TST).//
 +
 +**Regression - what is it?**
  
 It is also useful here to distinguish between “normal” and “forced” regression as the two terms can appear counter-intuitive. It is also useful here to distinguish between “normal” and “forced” regression as the two terms can appear counter-intuitive.
  
-Most geologists loosely associate regression with sea level fall and the coastline moving away from the hinterland and towards the basin centre. However regression is actually a function of sediment supply, not sea level fall – where an excess of sediment supply drives the shoreline basinwards – essentially it is a prograding series of sediments which aggrade (aggradation) basinwards.+Most geologists loosely associate regression with sea level fall and the coastline moving away from the hinterland and towards the basin centre. However true regression is actually a function of sediment supply, not sea level fall – where an excess of sediment supply drives the shoreline basinwards – essentially it is a prograding series of sediments which aggrade (aggradation) basinwards.
  
-Sedimentation rate outpaces any rise in relative sea level. Forced regression is actually the one driven by sea level fall. The coastline is effectively “forced” to regress (move basinwards) irrespective of the actual sediment supply, by falling sea levels. This results again in a prograding series of sediments, but with downstepping rather than aggradation.+Sedimentation rate outpaces any rise in relative sea level. //Forced// regression is actually the one driven by sea level fall. The coastline is effectively “forced” to regress (move basinwards) irrespective of the actual sediment supply, by falling sea levels. This results again in a prograding series of sediments, but with downstepping rather than aggradation.
  
 {{:seqstrat06.jpg?nolink|}} {{:seqstrat06.jpg?nolink|}}
seqstrat_mrs.1679323266.txt.gz · Last modified: 20/03/2023 14:41 by mike_gss

Donate Powered by PHP Valid HTML5 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki