Anatomy, geometry and sequence stratigraphy of basin floor to slope turbidite systems, Tanqua Karoo, South Africa
- 21 October 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Sedimentology
- Vol. 48 (5) , 987-1023
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-3091.2001.00405.x
Abstract
The Tanqua area of the Karoo basin, South Africa, contains five Permian deep‐water turbidite fan systems, almost completely exposed over some 640 km2. Reconstruction of the basin‐fill and fan distributions indicates a progradational trend in the 450 m+ thick succession, from distal basin floor (fan 1) through basin‐floor subenvironments (fans 2, 3 and 4) to a slope setting (fan 5). Fans are up to 65 m thick with gradational to sharp bases and tops. Facies associations include basin plain claystone and distal turbidite siltstone/claystone and a range of fine‐grained sandstone associations, including low‐ and high‐density turbidite current deposits and proportionally minor debris/slurry flows. Architectural elements include sheets of amalgamated and layered styles and channels of five types. Each fan is interpreted as a low‐frequency lowstand systems tract with the shaly interfan intervals representing transgressive and highstand systems tracts. All fans show complex internal facies distributions but exhibit a high‐frequency internal stratigraphy based on fan‐wide zones of relative sediment starvation. These zones are interpreted as transgressive and highstand systems tracts of higher order sequences. Sandy packages between these fine‐grained intervals are interpreted as high‐frequency lowstand systems tracts and exhibit dominantly progradational stacking patterns, resulting in subtle downdip clinoform geometries. Bases of fans and intrafan packages are interpreted as low‐ and high‐frequency sequence boundaries respectively. Facies juxtapositions across these sequence boundaries are variable and may be gradational, sharp or erosive. In all cases, criteria for a basinward shift of facies are met, but there is no standard ‘motif’ for sequence boundaries in this system. High‐frequency sequences represent the dominant mechanism of active fan growth in the Tanqua deep‐water system.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Slurry‐flow deposits in the Britannia Formation (Lower Cretaceous), North Sea: a new perspective on the turbidity current and debris flow problemSedimentology, 2000
- Tectonostratigraphical development of the Upper Karooforeland basin: Orogenic unloading versus thermally-induced Gondwana riftingJournal of African Earth Sciences, 1999
- Rates of delta progradation during highstands: consequences for timing of deposition in deep-marine systemsJournal of the Geological Society, 1998
- Sustained high‐density turbidity currents and the deposition of thick massive sandsSedimentology, 1995
- Beyond the turbidite paradigm: physical models for deposition of turbidites and their implications for reservoir predictionGeological Society, London, Special Publications, 1995
- Processes of late Quaternary turbidity current flow and deposition on the Var deep‐sea fan, north‐west Mediterranean SeaSedimentology, 1993
- Small‐scale hummocky cross‐stratification in turbidites: a form of antidune stratification?Sedimentology, 1990
- Non-steady state microbiological diagenesis and the origin of concretions and nodular limestonesGeological Society, London, Special Publications, 1987
- Turbidites of the northern Apennines: introduction to facies analysisInternational Geology Review, 1978
- THE GROWTH OF CAMBRIAN AND LIASSIC CONCRETIONSSedimentology, 1971