scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbonate Cycle Stacking Patterns and Hierarchies of Orbitally Forced Eustatic Sealevel Change

Carl N. Drummond, +1 more
- 01 May 1993 - 
- Vol. 63, Iss: 3, pp 369-377
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the authors consider the assumption that each individual cycle represents a single sealevel rise and show that multiple upward-shallowing cycles may originate during any single rise in sea-ice.
Abstract
Ordered stacking of meter-scale upward-shallowing cycles, manifested as repeated thickness hierarchies within cratonic carbonate sequences, has been considered primary evidence for causal relations between orbitally forced climate change and eustatic sealevel variation. Explicit in this argument is the assumption that each individual cycle represents a single sealevel rise. Sensitivity testing of one-dimensional forward models incorporating a depth threshold of carbonate accumulation indicates that multiple upward-shallowing cycles may originate during any single rise in sealevel. Variation in resultant cycle stacking pattern is sensitive to changes in sealevel amplitude, sedimentation rate, and subsidence rate, with highest stacking ratios (ratio of number of cyclic units to number of eustatic periods) produced by low sealevel amplitudes and high sedimentation and subsidence rates. These relations indicate that direct correlation between multiple-frequency eustatic sealevel variations and meter-scale cycle stacking hierarchies is unwarranted. Thus, prevalent interpretations regarding the stacking record of orbital forcing in ancient carbonate rock sequences should be reevaluated.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Depositional sequences in shallow carbonate-dominated sedimentary systems: concepts for a high-resolution analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, a hierarchical stacking of depositional sequences of shallow-water, carbonate-dominated sedimentary systems was studied in the Swiss and French Jura, in Spain, and in Normandy, showing that sea-level fluctuations were an important factor in their formation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate and vegetational regime shifts in the late Paleozoic ice age earth

TL;DR: The oscillatory transition between humid and seasonally dry vegetation appears to demonstrate a threshold-like behavior but probably not repeated transitions between alternative stable states, whereas changes in dominance in lowland equatorial regions were driven by long-term, repetitive climatic oscillations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Paleosols in shallow marine carbonate sequences

TL;DR: In this article, a wide range of macro-and micro-structures are associated with calcretes and profile types and stages in profile development can be defined, which can be used to identify the nature of the prevailing climate, although hydromorphic effects related to marine flooding of the platforms can modify the paleosols.
Journal ArticleDOI

High resolution UPb dating of Middle Triassic volcaniclastics: Time-scale calibration and verification of tuning parameters for carbonate sedimentation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported high-resolution single-zircon UPb age data for Middle Triassic volcaniclastic intercalations in biostratigraphically calibrated pelagic successions of the Southern Alps.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sequence stratigraphy as a scientific enterprise: the evolution and persistence of conflicting paradigms

TL;DR: Pay Payton et al. as discussed by the authors analyzed a specific subset of the new ideas, that pertaining to the concept of global-eustasy and the global cycle chart published by Vail et al., and found that they have not responded to any of the scientific problems identified by the opposing group.
Related Papers (5)