Abstract: Plate Tectonics and Sedimentary Cycles
in
Carbonate
Rocks
M. Malek-Aslani
The three-dimensional aspects of thick carbonate
sequences
can be explained best as a sequence of upward-shoaling
cycles
. A simple upward-shoaling cycle results in the building up of the seafloor by sedimentary processes, followed by progradation. Such sedimentary
cycles
can explain the depositional mechanism of relatively thin (< 60 ft or 18 m)
carbonate
beds.
The stretched-upward shoaling cycle, which develops in response to the contemporaneous subsidence, can be used to interpret the three-dimensional geometry of thick carbonate
sequences
. The stretched and simple upward-shoaling
cycles
are the building blocks which comprise the transgressive or regressive
carbonate
sequences
. Both simple and stretched-upward shoaling
cycles
can be recognized in the Mesozoic section of the Gulf Coast region.
Eustatic sea
-
level
fluctuations which can be related to the spreading rate of lithospheric blocks in the context of plate tectonics probably are controlling factors for some major transgressive episodes. However, most of the repetitive
cycles
are believed to be related to the tensional and shear stresses within the upper brittle layer of the crusts as a consequence of vertical movement within lithospheric plates. This mechanism probably was operative in the sedimentary basins related to divergent, convergent, and transform motions.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90967©1977 GCAGS and GC Section SEPM 27th Annual Meeting, Austin, Texas