Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9526211 | Sedimentary Geology | 2005 | 29 Pages |
Abstract
Arguably the most important contribution of Precambrian research to sequence stratigraphy is the better understanding of the mechanisms controlling stratigraphic cyclicity in the rock record, and hence of the criteria that should be employed in a system of sequence stratigraphic hierarchy. There is increasing evidence that the tectonic regimes which controlled the formation and evolution of sedimentary basins in the more distant geological past were much more erratic in terms of origin and rates than formerly inferred solely from the study of the Phanerozoic record. In this context, time is largely irrelevant as a parameter in the classification of stratigraphic sequences, and it is rather the stratigraphic record of changes in the tectonic setting that provides the key criteria for the basic subdivision of the rock record into basin-fill successions separated by first-order sequence boundaries. These first-order basin-fill successions are in turn subdivided into second- and lower-order sequences that result from shifts in the balance between accommodation and sedimentation at various scales of observation, irrespective of the time span between two same-order consecutive events. Sequences identified in any particular basin are not expected to correlate to other first- and lower-order sequences of other basins that may be similar in age but may have different timing and duration.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Earth-Surface Processes
Authors
O. Catuneanu, M.A. Martins-Neto, P.G. Eriksson,