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Lower Permian sequence stratigraphy of the western Delaware Basin Margin, Sierra Diablo, west Texas

Posted on:1998-01-14Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The University of Texas at AustinCandidate:Fitchen, William MillsFull Text:PDF
GTID:1460390014474013Subject:Geology
Abstract/Summary:
The Sierra Diablo provide unique exposures of Lower Permian carbonate platforms, in which sequence stratigraphic analysis based on three-dimensional stratal geometries can be integrated with conventional one-dimensional cycle stacking pattern analysis. The sequence framework in the Sierra Diablo includes 3 middle through upper Wolfcampian high-frequency sequences (HFS) and 6 Leonardian HFS (1.6 ma average duration). This framework highlights both the regional predictability of HFS attributes, as well as the systematic local variability of HFS attributes caused by non-eustatic factors.; The Wolfcampian HFS comprise an updip siliciclastic unit (Powwow Formation; 0-75 m), which onlaps a widespread angular unconformity, and a downdip, platform carbonate unit (main body of the Hueco Group; 420 m thick). The carbonate unit contains two middle Wolfcampian HFS (mW1-mW2), which compose a progradational composite sequence (CS), and a backstepped late Wolfcampian HFS (uW1). 270 m of Wolfcampian platform margin strata are truncated by a subaerial-to-submarine unconformity. The unconformity is onlapped by breccias along the toe-of-slope and exhibits a 43 paleokarst profile along the platform top. Submarine erosion is attributed to platform margin slumping, probably initiated in the early late Wolfcampian following platform margin backstepping.; The Leonardian sequences comprise the Victorio Peak (platform facies; 160-220 m) and Bone Spring Fonnations (platform margin to basin facies; 40-230 m). These include the L1-L6 HFS, which compose two larger-scale CS. The lower CS consists of lowstand (L1), transgressive (L2-L3) and highstand (L4) HFS sets; the upper CS contains transgressive (L5) and highstand (L6) HFS sets. Lowstand and highstand HFS exhibit high positive progradation/aggradation ratios, seaward-stepping cycles, low facies diversity, a seaward shift in the position of maximum accommodation, toplap below seaward-dipping sequence boundaries, and greater potential for karst development along sequence boundaries. Transgressive sequences exhibit low positive to negative progradation/aggradation ratios, landward-stepping to vertically-stacked cycles, high facies diversity, a landward shift in the position of maximum accommodation, and more common outer platform/margin reef development.; Along-strike variability in stacking patterns is best developed in transgressive HFS, and is attributed to spatial variations in accommodation, antecedent topography, differential compactional, energy regime (related to wind direction, headland-bight shoreline trends, and shelf paleobathymetry), and sediment accumulation rates.
Keywords/Search Tags:Sierra diablo, Sequence, HFS, Lower, Margin, Platform
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