997 resultados para Fluvial Sedimentology
Resumo:
[EN] Petrography and sedimentology of aeolian sands: a tool for diagnose the sedimentary deficit in La Graciosa island (Natural Park of Archipielago Chinijo, Canary Islands, Spain).
Resumo:
[ES] El presente trabajo ofrece un análisis preliminar de la red fluvial con antecedencia terciaria del sureste gallego. Las observaciones geomorfológicas de campo se centran en la cartografía de terrazas erosivas, canales abandonados, meandros colgados, codos de captura y redes anómalas. Para su interpretación se confrontaron con los thalwegs de los cursos principales y las fracturas alpinas cartografiadas por otros autores. Se propone una cronología para los procesos fluviales identificados; cronología que apunta una antigüedad de la red fluvial mayor a la estimada hasta el momento. De las siete tendencias identificadas, tres presentan una entidad regional (ENE-WSW, NE-SW, N-S), y cuatro local (NW-SE, SW-NE, SE-NW, S-N). Se confirma el carácter principal de la paleorred ENE-WSW (caracterizada por el río Sil) y como hipótesis se propone, para la Sierra de Queixa-San Mamede, el carácter de paleorrelieve positivo de herencia mesozoica. Este relieve habría sufrido varios procesos de levantamiento isostático y también tectónico durante la Orogenia Alpina. Estos levantamientos habrían provocado la superposición de capturas en las estribaciones surorientales de la Sierra de Queixa-San Mamede.
Resumo:
This is the first detailed study of the westernmost portion of the outcrop belt, which extends along the western flank of the Talkeetna Mountains and includes thick, well-exposed outcrops along Willow Creek in the eastern Susitna basin. New sedimentologic, compositional, and geochronologic data were obtained from stratigraphic sections within Arkose Ridge Formation strata at Willow Creek. This data combined with new geologic mapping and geochronologic data from Willow Bench and Kashwitna River Bluff (north of Willow Creek), and from the Government Peak area (east of Willow Creek), help constrain depositional processes and source terranes that provided detritus to the westernmost Arkose Ridge Formation strata.
Resumo:
Paleogene sedimentary rocks of the Arkose Ridge Formation (Talkeetna Mountains, Alaska) preserve a record of a fluvial-lacustrine depositional environment and its forested ecosystem in an active basin among the convergent margin tectonic processes that shaped southern Alaska. An -800 m measured succession at Box Canyon indicates braid-plain deposition with predominantly gravelly deposits low in the exposure to sandy and muddy facies associations below an overlying lava flow sequence. U-Pb geochronology on zircons from a tuff and a sandstone within the measured section, as well as an Ar/Ar date from the overlying lava constrain the age of the sedimentary succession to between similar to 59 Ma and 48 Ma Fossil plant remains occur throughout the Arkose Ridge Formation as poorly-preserved coalified woody debris and fragmentary leaf impressions. At Box Canyon, however, a thin la-custrine depositional lens of rhythmically laminated mudrocks yielded fish fossils and a well-preserved floral assemblage including foliage and reproductive organs representing conifers, sphenopsids, monocots, and dicots. Leaf physiognomic methods to estimate paleoclimate were applied to the dicot leaf collection and indicate warm temperate paleotemperatures (-11-15 +/- -4 degrees C MAT) and elevated paleoprecipitation (-120 cm/yr MAP) estimates as compared to modem conditions; results that are parallel with previously published estimates from the partly coeval Chickaloon Formation deposited in more distal depositional environments in the same basin. The low abundance of leaf herbivory in the Box Canyon dicot assemblage (-9% of leaves damaged) is also similar to the results from assemblages in the meander-plain depositional systems of the Chickaloon. This new suite of data informs models of the tectonostratigraphic evolution of southern Alaska and the developing understanding of terrestrial paleoecology and paleoclimate at high latitudes during the Late Paleocene-Early Eocene greenhouse climate phase. (c) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.