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autostepping
Autostepping during the transgressive growth of deltas: Results from flume experiments
Figure 4. Model of autostepping. Numbers indicate order of formation of del...
Autostratigraphy: A Framework Norm for Genetic Stratigraphy
Chronostratigraphic charts showing autogenic responses of the fluviodeltaic...
Autogenic response of fluvial deltas to steady sea-level fall: Implications from flume-tank experiments
Estimating magnitudes of relative sea-level change in a coarse-grained fan delta system: Implications for Pennsylvanian glacioeustasy
Autogenic delta progradation during sea-level rise within incised valleys
The Influence of Valley Morphology On the Rate of Bayhead Delta Progradation
Hierarchical Architecture of Sequences and Bounding Surfaces In A Depositional-Dip Transect of the Fluvio-Deltaic Ferron Sandstone (Turonian), Southeastern Utah, U.S.A.
High-resolution Sequence Stratigraphy and Implications For Cretaceous Glacioeustasy of the Late Cretaceous Gallup System, New Mexico, U.S.A.
Sustained Alluvial Aggradation and Autogenic Detachment of the Alluvial River from the Shoreline in Response to Steady Fall of Relative Sea Level
Numerical Modeling of Falling-Stage Topset Aggradation: Implications for Distinguishing Between Forced and Unforced Regressions In the Geological Record
In Defense of Shelf-Edge Delta Development during Falling and Lowstand of Relative Sea Level
Response of A Coal-Bearing Coastal-Plain Succession To Marine Transgression: Campanian Neslen Formation, Utah, U.S.A.
Reconstructing backwater hydrodynamics from fluvial-deltaic deposits using stratigraphic inversion: An example from the Tullig Sandstone, Western Irish Namurian Basin, County Clare, Ireland
Sequence stratigraphy of experimental strata under known conditions of differential subsidence and variable base level
Sediment transfer from shelf to deepwater slope: How does it happen?
A Mind of Their Own: Recent Advances in Autogenic Dynamics in Rivers and Deltas
Abstract The science of the internally generated behavior and spatial organization of depositional systems has come a long way since Beerbower first coined the term “autocycles” to refer to fining-upward sequences generated by river meander migration, cutoff, and eventual return. Ongoing research has broadened the scope and scale range of known autogenic dynamics, even as a unifying theme—sediment storage and release—has emerged. Many internally generated processes do not have a single characteristic length or time scale but rather occupy a broad scale range (hence, “autocyclic” has been gradually replaced by “autogenic”). But even where they are broad, the scale ranges for autogenic processes are bounded by limiting time and length scales. The central role of sediment storage and release provides a means of estimating these limiting length and time scales based on mass balance, geometry, and mean sediment flux. Recent research has also allowed us to expand the upper limits of autogenic behavior to time scales of 10 5 to 10 6 years. Finally, we recognize that autogenic dynamics is not simply superimposed on allogenic signals but interacts strongly with, modifies, and even destroys allogenic input. That the autogenic imprint on the stratigraphic record is stronger and more complex than once thought can be seen as an opportunity to focus on using the record to learn about intrinsic surface behavior under pre-human conditions, rather than simply as an archive of externally imposed signals.