Skip to Main Content
Skip Nav Destination
GEOREF RECORD

Deposit structure and processes of sand deposition from decelerating sediment suspensions

Esther J. Sumner, Lawrence A. Amy and Peter J. Talling
Deposit structure and processes of sand deposition from decelerating sediment suspensions
Journal of Sedimentary Research (August 2008) 78 (8): 529-547

Abstract

Turbidity currents are notoriously difficult to monitor directly, therefore interpretation of their deposits forms the basis for much of our understanding of these flows. The deceleration rate of a flow is a potentially important yet poorly understood control on depositional processes. A series of experiments were conducted in an annular flume, in which fast (up to 3.5 m/s) and highly turbulent flows of sand (up to 250 mu m) and water were decelerated at different rates and processes of deposition and deposit character analyzed. Previously poorly documented depositional processes were observed in the experiments. This is because the flows were initially unusually fast and of prolonged duration, with sustained periods of sediment fallout as the flow slowed down. The conditions in these flows are thus likely to be closer to those at the base of a waning turbidity current than is achieved in other relatively slow experimental flows. The collapse of high-concentration, moving, thin (<5 mm) near-bed layers (laminar sheared layers) were an important mechanism by which the bed aggraded beneath these unsteady flows. At bed aggradation rates in excess of 0.44 mm/s the sequential collapse of laminar sheared layers produced a structureless, poorly graded and poorly sorted deposit (Bouma T (sub a) ). When bed aggradation rates fell below 0.44 mm/s the collapsing laminar sheared layers were reworked by turbulence to form planar laminae (Bouma T (sub b) ). These laminae are formed in a very different manner than the planar laminae attributed to bedwaves in previous open-channel flow experiments. Collapse of laminar sheared layers is therefore an alternative process for generating the Bouma T (sub b) division. Inverse grading developed at the base of the deposits of slowly decelerated flows. This inverse grading was probably a result of grain sorting in a high-concentration layer that persisted at the base of the flow for many minutes prior to the onset of deposition.


ISSN: 1527-1404
EISSN: 1938-3681
Serial Title: Journal of Sedimentary Research
Serial Volume: 78
Serial Issue: 8
Title: Deposit structure and processes of sand deposition from decelerating sediment suspensions
Affiliation: University of Bristol, Department of Earth Sciences, Bristol, United Kingdom
Pages: 529-547
Published: 200808
Text Language: English
Publisher: Society for Sedimentary Geology, Tulsa, OK, United States
References: 58
Accession Number: 2008-122887
Categories: Sedimentary petrology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 1 table, 1 plate
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States. Reference includes data supplied by SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology), Tulsa, OK, United States
Update Code: 200847

or Create an Account

Close Modal
Close Modal