Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6347891 Global and Planetary Change 2016 72 Pages PDF
Abstract
Key elements in the carbonate environments that differ from the siliciclastic systems are: 1) intrabasinal conditions (nutrients, salinity, temperature, water energy, transparency) are important controls on carbonate production and therefore also control in-situ accommodation and how it may be filled; 2) depositional accommodation can be both physical (controlled by hydrodynamics) and ecological (in the building-up above the base level mode); 3) because carbonates are products of biological activity, their production modes have been changing with time as their biotic components have evolved; 4) seafloor morphology determines the size and efficiency of the carbonate factory; 5) several carbonate factories may coexist or alternate, in-phase, out-of-phase with or independently of the sea level changes. The complexity and interplay of all of these governing factors contribute to very diverse carbonate production styles and edifices. Consequently, sequence-stratigraphic interpretations in carbonates are more meaningful when seen through the lens of process-product relationships, rather than simply through bedding patterns and bounding surfaces characterization.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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