The Upper Jurassic ‘Boulder Beds’ and related deposits: a fault-controlled submarine slope, NE Scotland
- 1 March 1984
- journal article
- Published by Geological Society of London in Journal of the Geological Society
- Vol. 141 (2) , 357-374
- https://doi.org/10.1144/gsjgs.141.2.0357
Abstract
During the late Jurassic (Kimmeridgian) rifting in the North Sea, large-scale normal faults developed to form relatively deep marine basins. The north-western margin of one of these basins, defined by the Helmsdale Fault, is described to show the nature of sedimentation associated with a submarine fault scarp. Subsidence to the SE of the Helmsdale Fault led to a fault scarp down which various sediment mass flows moved, including debris flow, rockfall, high and low concentration turbidity currents and possible storm surge wash-over deposits. Redeposition by soft-sediment sliding was important as a slope accretion process. Deep channels were incised into the slope and infilled by coarse-grained elastics: contemporaneous, small-scale submarine fans, located farther off in the present North Sea, may have developed as a result of slope-bypassing sediment flows down such channels. The succession is characterized by extreme sediment heterogeneity compared to many deep water environments and it may be part of an ancient fan delta. The main influences upon slope accretion were the synsedimentary movements on the Helmsdale Fault and the nature of the available sediment input, such that the succession represents structurally controlled and sedimentologically modified slope development.This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- A storm surge origin for sandstone beds in an epicontinental platform sequence, Ordovician, NorwayPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Sizes of submarine slides and their significancePublished by Elsevier ,2003
- SEDIMENTOLOGY OF THE BRAE OILFIELD, NORTH SEA: FAN MODELS AND CONTROLSJournal of Petroleum Geology, 1982
- Lithology and subsidence in the North SeaPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1982
- Trench‐slope channels from the New Zealand Jurassic: the Otekura Formation, Sandy Bay, South OtagoSedimentology, 1979
- The distribution of palynomorphs in the Jurassic rocks of the Brora Outlier, NE ScotlandJournal of the Geological Society, 1977
- Graded limestones and limestone-quartzite couplets: Possible storm-deposits from the Moroccan CarboniferousSedimentary Geology, 1975
- ROTATIONAL SLUMPS AND SLUMP SCARS IN SILURIAN ROCKS, WESTERN IRELANDSedimentology, 1968
- XIV.—Submarine Faulting in Kimmeridgian Times: East SutherlandTransactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1933
- XXIII.—The Jurassic Flora of SutherlandTransactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1910