BY: Barsisa T
BY: Barsisa T
Contents
Facies concepts
Lithostratigraphy
Biostratigraphy
Chronostratigraphy
Seismic, sequence, and magnetic
stratigraphy
FACIES CONCEPTS
•Depositional systems are sets of depositional environments
linked by the process of sediment dispersal.
•Some of the large scale stratigraphic responses to tectonic
and eustatic factors.
•A hierarchy of depositional products based on scale exists
from facies/beds to assemblages of facies in parasequences,
to depositional systems and finally depositional sequences.
•Depositional systems and their sedimentary products
therefore reflect the integration of autogenic and allogenic
controls.
•Sedimentary basins with different driving mechanisms
consequently have distinctive assemblages of depositional
systems and facies.
The term facies represents a unit of rock distinguished in the field by
a specific combination of lithological, physical and biological
structures that differentiate it from other rock units above, below or
adjacent to it (Walker, 1992).
Generally, the facies concept refers to the sum of characteristics of a
sedimentary unit resulting from some particular set of physical,
chemical and biological processes that work to produce a unit with
specific textural, structural, and compositional properties.
The meaning of the term “facies”
Observational facies: The observable attributes of a sedimentary
rock body that reflect the depositional processes or environments
that formed it.”
Interpretive facies: Not specific to a rock, but to a predicted set
of characteristics associated with some depositional environment
Types of observational facies
Uses of Lithostratigraphy
What lithostratigraphy can do for you?
Place unit in geologic framework
Establish stratigraphic relationship with units above and
below
Aid in correlation between other lithologic units
SEDIMENTARY FACIES
• Both intertonging and lateral gradation indicate simultaneous
deposition in adjacent environments.
• A sedimentary facies is a body of sediment with distinctive
physical, chemical and biological attributes deposited side-by-
side with other sediments in different environments.
• On a continental shelf, sand may accumulate in the high-energy
nearshore environment.
• While mud and carbonate deposition takes place at the same time in offshore
low-energy environments.
Marine
• A marine transgression occurs when sea level rises
Transgressions
with respect to the land.
• During a marine transgression,
– the shoreline migrates landward
– the environments paralleling the shoreline
migrate landward as the sea progressively covers
more and more of a continent
• Each laterally adjacent depositional environment
produces a sedimentary facies.
• During a transgression, the facies forming offshore
become superposed upon facies deposited in
nearshore environments.
Marine Transgression
Marine Transgression
• The rocks of each facies
become younger in a
landward direction during a
marine transgression
• One body of rock with the
same attributes (a facies) was
deposited gradually at different
times in different places so it is
time transgressive
– meaning the ages vary from
place to place
Marine Regression
• During a marine regression, sea level falls with respect to the
continent.
– the environments paralleling the shoreline migrate seaward.
Marine Regression
• A marine regression
– is the opposite of
a marine
transgression
• It yields a vertical
sequence with
nearshore facies
overlying offshore
facie sand rock
units become
younger in the
seaward direction
Walther’s
• Johannes Walther (1860-1937)
Law noticed that the same facies he
found laterally were also present in a vertical sequence, now
called Walther’s Law.
• holds that
– the facies seen in a
conformable vertical
sequence will
also
replace one
laterally another
– Walther’s law applies to
marine transgressions
and regressions
Causes of Transgressions and Regressions
Note that during a time of normal polarity the magnetic lines of force
appear to "flow" out of Earth at the geographic South Pole, bend around
Earth, and reenter at the geographic North Pole.
•Thus, a compass needle hinged vertically (swings up and
down) would point down (into Earth) at the North Pole and up
(out of Earth) at the South Pole.
•The flow direction of the magnetic lines of force, and the
direction of a compass needle, would reverse during an
episode of reversed polarity.
•Reversals of Earth's magnetic field are recorded in sediments
and igneous rocks by patterns of normal and reversed
remanent magnetism.
• The direction of magnetization of a rock is defined by its
north-seeking magnetization.
•If the north-seeking magnetization of rocks points toward
Earth's present magnetic north pole, the rock is said to have
normal-polarity magnetization.
•If the north-seeking magnetization points toward the present-day south
magnetic pole, the rock has reversed-polarity magnetization, or reversed
polarity.
•Thus, sedimentary and igneous rocks that display bulk remanent
magnetic properties of the same magnetic polarity as the present
magnetic field of Earth have normal polarity.
• Those that have the opposite magnetic orientation have reverse
polarity.
Figure. Schematic
representation of
Earth's magnetic
field during
episodes of (A)
normal and (B)
reversed polarity.
Applications of Magnetostratigraphy
and Paleomagnetism Correlation
•The primary application of magnetostratigraphy
lies in its use as a tool for global correlation of
marine strata.
•The first significant application of
magnetostratigraphic techniques to correlation and
age determinations of rocks was correlation of
linear ocean-floor magnetic anomalies to on-land
sections of volcanic strata whose ages had been
determined by radiometric methods.
•These correlation techniques were subsequently
extended to cores of oceanic sediments.
Biostratigraphy
•The characterization and correlation of rock units on the basis
of their fossil content is called biostratigraphy.
•Stratigraphy based on the paleontologic characteristics of
sedimentary rocks is also referred to as stratigraphic
paleontology.
•The concept of biostratigraphy is based on the principle that
organisms have undergone successive changes throughout
geologic time.
• Thus, any unit of strata can be dated and characterized by its
fossil content.
•That is, on the basis of its contained fossils, any stratigraphic
unit can be differentiated from stratigraphically younger and
older units.
•A biostratigraphic unit is a body of rock that is defined or
characterized by its fossil content.
•Biostratigraphic – based on the principles of faunal succession
and superposition
• The occurrence of fossils in beds of sedimentary rocks
provided the basis for correlation of strata.
• The evolution of organisms through time and the formation
of new species provide the basis for the recognition of
periods in the history of the Earth on the basis of the
fossils that are contained within strata.
• In this way Earth history can be divided up into major
units that are now known to represent hundreds of millions
of years, some of which are familiarly known as ‘the age
of fish’, ‘the age of reptiles’ and so on, because of the
types of fossils found.
• Correlation between biostratigraphic units and the
geological time scale therefore provides the temporal
framework for the analysis of successions of sedimentary
rocks.
• Life evolves over and leaves
recognizable
time traces in rocks called
fossils.
– actual preserved body parts, casts
or impressions of body parts, or
traces left by the passage of an
organism (e.g., a worm burrow or
footprint)
• A distinctive species or assemblage
with a limited age range and a wide
geographic range is an index fossil and
can be used for correlation
– In general, biostratigraphy is a
vastly better tool for correlation
than lithostratigraphy, since
evolution imprints a timestamp on
fossils, whereas rock deposition
environments move around but do
not really evolve with time (except
where biologically controlled).
– Some care is required: organisms
migrate, and biostratigraphic zones
can be time-transgressive.
Chronostratigraphy
• Establishing the time relationship among rock units is
called
chronostratigraphy.
•Stratigraphic units defined and delineated on the basis of time
are geologic time units.
•Chronostratigraphy is the arrangement of rocks into
•units based on their age,
Chronostratigraphic oldest
units werefirst, formed
youngest duringa
last.
portion of geological time and specific their boundaries
significant. are time
•A chronostratigraphic unit is a body of rock established to
serve as the material reference for all rocks formed during the
same span of time. Example: Devonian System
•A geochronologic unit is a division of time distinguished on the
basis of the rock record preserved in a chronostratigraphic unit.
Example: Devonian Period
Geochronologic Unit - a division of time distinguished on the
basis of the rock record as expressed by chronostratigraphic
units.
•The beginning of a geochronologic unit corresponds to the time
of deposition of the bottom of the chronostratigraphic unit.
•The ending corresponds to the time of deposition of the top of
the reference unit.
•The hierarchy of geochronologic units and their corresponding
geochronostratigraphic units are: