Identifying autogenic sedimentation in fluvial-deltaic stratigraphy: Evaluating the effect of outcrop-quality data on the compensation statistic: Identifying Autogenic Sedimentation
- NSF-PAR ID:
- 10036919
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface
- Volume:
- 122
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2169-9003
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 91 to 113
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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Periodic external environmental forcings, typically operating at Milankovitch frequencies, are known to be encoded in sediments and sedimentary rocks, but sub-Milankovitch frequencies are more difficult to recognize, in part because of temporal overlap with autogenic processes. Here we use luminescence geochronology and rock-magnetic and lithostratigraphic-based cyclostratigraphy to investigate sub-Milankovitch periodicity in three high sedimentation rate deltas located in diverse tectonic and climatic settings. The Sciota kame delta in tectonically stable eastern Pennsylvania (USA) was deposited at a rate of ~2.5 cm/yr over ~1 kyrs and has a concentration of magnetic spectral power at ~53 cm, corresponding to a ~22 yr period. Lacking a subaerial fluvial catchment, periodicity in this delta is necessarily restricted to depositional processes or ice-wasting discharge fluctuations. Similarly, the Provo-stage Lake Bonneville High Creek delta (Utah, USA) was deposited at a rate of ~3 cm/yr over ~3 kyrs. It displays meter-scale coarsening-up bedsets interpreted as decadal-scale discharge variations during foreset propagation. Unlike the Sciota kame, the High Creek delta is fed by a subaerial catchment with little storage that supported a small cirque glacier during the LGM. The High Creek delta also aggraded in the subsiding hanging wall of the East Cache Valley fault and experienced at least one syn-depositional earthquake. Lastly, The Pagliara delta (northeast Sicily, Italy) was deposited at a rate of ~3 cm/yr in the rapidly uplifting footwall of a coastal seismogenic normal fault. This delta has a concentration of magnetic susceptibility spectral power at ~60 cm corresponding to a ~20 yr period. A multi-decadal periodicity emerges in all three deltas, despite the variable catchment, climate, and tectonic setting. We interpret this as representing a quasi-periodic, autogenic depositional process possibly related to distributary channel switching. However, differences in the rock-magnetic power spectra and lithostratigraphy of the Pagliara and High Creek deltas respectfully, indicates that sub-Milankovitch external forcings in the catchments, including tectonics, are also encoded in the delta stratigraphy.more » « less