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sedimentational and abrasion theories

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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1951
AAPG Bulletin (1951) 35 (9): 1994–2016.
... Sedimentary in origin but related to some Pleistocene lowered sea-level Abrasional in origin and essentially in equilibrium with present sea-level Abrasional in origin but formed during some Pleistocene eustatically lowered sea-level According to the sedimentational theory, the shelf-break marks...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1980
GSA Bulletin (1980) 91 (10_Part_II): 2189–2213.
... at a point will thus be proportional to the local sediment transport rate and will depend upon the details of the fluid flow. This paper describes a bed-load-abrasion, stream-incision model developed from engineering sandblast-abrasion theory. This model is not generally applicable to bed-rock incision...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 June 2014
Geology (2014) 42 (6): 523–526.
...Joel S. Scheingross; Fanny Brun; Daniel Y. Lo; Khadijah Omerdin; Michael P. Lamb Abstract Fluvial bedrock incision sets the pace of landscape evolution and can be dominated by abrasion from impacting particles. Existing bedrock incision models diverge on the ability of sediment to erode within...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1958
GSA Bulletin (1958) 69 (8): 967–974.
...WILLIAM C BRADLEY Abstract According to classical theory, wave-cut platforms are developed by deep submarine abrasion while sea level is stationary. Modern writers, however, believe that wave erosion takes place only in shallow water. Fragile, subaerially etched pyroxene sand grains...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 December 1999
Geology (1999) 27 (12): 1079–1082.
..., and energy inputs, even under conditions of uniform size distribution in sediment flux. Thus, although selective deposition and abrasion clearly can and do play a role in some fluvial systems, neither is necessary to produce downstream fining within a drainage network. Geological Society of America 1999 ...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 January 2014
GSA Bulletin (2014) 126 (1-2): 31–46.
...Ryan E. McKeon; Peter K. Zeitler; Frank J. Pazzaglia; Bruce D. Idleman; Eva Enkelmann Abstract The Appalachian Mountains (eastern United States) are the archetypal old, long-decaying orogen from which major theories for long-term landscape evolution have been derived. However, given the variability...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1985
GSA Bulletin (1985) 96 (4): 451–462.
... disruption of interbedded sediments or in situ tectonic plucking and abrasion of adjacent rocks. Although some type III mélanges may have originated deep within accretionary prisms, final emplacement as olistostromes (muddy debris-flow deposits) or mud diapirs seems likely. Type III mélanges...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1965
Geological Magazine (1965) 102 (5): 407–414.
... extent, and the presence of striated, grooved, and polished quartzite bedrock directly beneath the tillite. Faceted and flat-iron-shaped pebbles are rare or absent; most megaclasts tend towards an ellipsoidal shape--an observation in agreement with recent theories of glacial abrasion. GeoRef, Copyright...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 November 1960
GSA Bulletin (1960) 71 (11): 1721–1726.
...PAUL D KRYNINE Abstract The ancient Greek philosophers held very modern views on sedimentation. Democritus discovered shape sorting of pebbles on beaches; Aristotle worked out the mechanical aspects of pebble abrasion; Plato produced truly post-Huttonian descriptions of erosion and deposition...
Published: 01 January 2006
DOI: 10.1130/2006.2398(09)
... Understanding and quantifying fluvial transport and bedrock abrasion processes have become major concerns in modeling landform response to tectonic and climatic forcing. Recent theoretical and experimental investigations have in particular stressed the importance of sediment supply and size...
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Journal Article
Journal: PALAIOS
Published: 01 December 1988
PALAIOS (1988) 3 (6): 588–597.
... and preferential destruction of the thinner brachial valve by abrasion The Mount Auburn Member consists of nodular to wavy and breakage. Polished sections of 50 shells exhibit a repeated thinly interbedded limestone (60%) and dolomitic claystone filling sequence beginning with mixed and laminated skeletal (40...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 22 February 2021
Geology (2021) 49 (6): 682.
...—the slower fracturing-driven removal of rock due to impacts of transported sediment—which produces sand- or silt-sized fragments at the mineral grain scale (i.e., wear). An abrasion subregime (macro-abrasion) has been hypothesized to exist under high impact energies typical of cobble or boulder transport...
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Journal Article
Published: 28 October 2024
Journal of the Geological Society (2025) 182 (1): jgs2024-046.
... ; Insole and Hutt 1994 ; Sweetman 2011 ; Coram et al. 2017 ). Inconsistent definitions of the type of sediments that make up the Hypsilophodon Bed and the scarcity of taphonomic analysis of the Hypsilophodon fossils themselves have previously made it difficult to evaluate different theories...
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Series: Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Published: 01 January 2010
DOI: 10.1144/SP346.5
EISBN: 9781862395947
.... The seaward edge of the surface is everywhere buried by the onlapping continental-shelf sediment wedge. The contiguity of the abrasion surface with the unconformity in the shelf sediment wedge suggests that marine planation began in the Mid-Oligocene, indicating time-average rates of gross cliff retreat...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 13 January 2025
GSA Bulletin (2025)
... uplift in southwestern Montana. Our integration of microscopic observations of glass morphology and lab experiments of hydrofluoric acid (HF) abrasion of glasses for various durations (30 s to 30 min) shows that 10% HF abrasion for at least 5 min removes most of the recycled glass in tuffaceous sediments...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1945
AAPG Bulletin (1945) 29 (9): 1233–1261.
... of the sediment. FIG. 7. —Abrasion curves of limestone fragments ( 21 ). This brief discussion illustrates how the conversion of sedimentary observations into numbers helps clarify the understanding of particle properties. Yet abrasion is only one aspect of particle behavior. The illustration given...
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Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 August 2014
Geology (2014) 42 (8): 679–682.
.... , 1997 , The relationship between subglacial water pressure and velocity of Findelengletscher, Switzerland, during its advance and retreat : Journal of Glaciology , v. 43 , p. 328 – 338 . Iverson N.R. , 1990 , Laboratory simulation of glacial abrasion: Comparison with theory : Journal...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 April 2017
Journal of Sedimentary Research (2017) 87 (4): 353–365.
... ), a hyperbole that betrays mythical thinking. Sediments do not “mature” during physical transport in water. This was first documented by Russell (1937 , p. 1343) along the 1740 km stretch of the Mississippi River from Cairo, Illinois, to the Gulf of Mexico: “ selective destruction of minerals by abrasion...
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Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 22 November 2021
Geology (2022) 50 (3): 321–325.
... stream power variations and thresholds at The Kink ( Figs. 3A–3C ). Bedrock incision can occur by abrasion when bed shear stresses exceed a threshold for incipient sediment motion (“transport-limited” incision; e.g., Sklar and Dietrich, 2001 ; Lamb et al., 2008 ), and incision by bedrock detachment...
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Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 December 2011
Geology (2011) 39 (12): 1147–1150.
..., where cliff retreat is maximized by sediment abrasion and minimized by either a lack of beach sediment or too much sediment (which prevents waves from reaching the sea cliff). As sea cliffs retreat, beach sediment is produced and distributed alongshore by wave-driven sediment transport, and local beach...
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