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Architecture of marine rift-basin successions

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TLDR
In this article, the fourfold rift basin infill classification scheme was proposed for predicting the distribution and geometry of synrift reservoir and source rock types, despite the inherent variability of the marine synrift infills.
Abstract
Marine rift basins represent a continuum ranging from mixed nonmarine/marine through shallow marine to deep marine, or from partly emergent through partly submergent to completely submergent basin types. These rift basin types have strongly variable synrift sedimentary architectures because of temporal changes in relative sea level, accommodation creation, and sediment supply throughout the rift cycle. Accommodation changes are controlled mainly by local basin-floor rotation, basinwide background subsidence, and, to a lesser degree, by eustatic changes. Sediment supply determines how much of the accommodation is filled and in what manner, and is controlled by the distance to the main hinterland areas, and the size and sediment- yield potential of any local fault-block source area. Marine siliciclastic synrift successions, whether dominantly shallow or deep marine in nature, are classified in terms of sediment supply as overfilled, balanced, underfilled, and starved. Sediment-overfilled and sediment-balanced infill types are characterized by a threefold sandstone-mudstone- sandstone synrift sediment-infill motif; the sediment-underfilled type is represented by a two-fold conglomerate-sandstone-mudstone motif; and the sediment-starved type commonly is represented by a one-fold mudstone motif. The sequential development, linked depositional systems, and stratigraphic signatures of the early synrift, the rift climax, and the late synrift to early postrift stages vary significantly between these rift basin infill types, as do the tectonic significance (timing of initiation and duration) of stratal surfaces, such as footwall unconformities, nondepositional hiatuses, and marine condensed sections. The construction of the fourfold rift basin infill classification scheme provides a first basis and a strong tool for predicting the distribution and geometry of synrift reservoir and source rock types, despite the inherent variability of the marine synrift infills.

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Citations
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Transgressive deposits: a review of their variability

TL;DR: In this article, a classification of transgressive seafloor facies is proposed based on the recognition of distinctive surfaces (wave and tidal ravinement surfaces, transgressive surface) within the transgressive lithosome.
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'Zipper-rift': a tectonic model for Neoproterozoic glaciations during the breakup of Rodinia after 750 Ma

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the sedimentological and stratigraphic evidence for glaciation in the light of current knowledge of glacial depositional systems and integrate this analysis with recent understanding of the tectonic setting of Neoproterozoic sedimentary basins.
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Sequence architecture, depositional systems, and controls on development of lacustrine basin fills in part of the Erlian basin, northeast China

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated sequence architecture and depositional systems of a Jurassic-Cretaceous lacustrine rift succession in the Wuliyashitai subbasin, and Erlian basin in northeastern China.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Uniform-sense normal simple shear of the continental lithosphere

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Detachment faulting and the evolution of passive continental margins

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