Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6442408 | Precambrian Research | 2011 | 19 Pages |
Abstract
Based on the lithofacies assemblages, the Brattefjell Formation can be subdivided into sandy subtidal, lagoon-estuary, and shallow marine shoreface-offshore environments deposited above the fairwater wave base. The Brattefjell Formation records millions of years of fluctuating water levels with an overall transgressive trend, indicating allocyclic patterns caused by regional subsidence. The formation is interpreted to represent a tidally influenced epeiric sea in which shallow water levels extended over part of a continent and it was associated with marine transgression. The shoreface was fed sediment by alongshore and coastal current drifts during shoreface transgressive erosion, in a low shoreline gradient with reduced sediment input and lack of major braided-fluvial channel(s).
Related Topics
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Authors
Juha Köykkä, Jarkko Lamminen,