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Journal ArticleDOI

Physiographic features and stratification types of coarse‐grained pointbars: modern and ancient examples1

J. H. McGowen, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1970 - 
- Vol. 14, pp 77-111
TLDR
In this paper, the authors compare the sedimentary structures in modern point bar deposits of the Amite River in Louisiana and the Colorado River in Texas are analogous to features observed in Eocene Simsboro and Pleistocene Colorado River deposits.
Abstract
SUMMARY Primary sedimentary structures in modern point bar deposits of the Amite River in Louisiana and the Colorado River in Texas are analogous to features observed in Eocene Simsboro and Pleistocene Colorado River deposits of the Texas Gulf Coastal Plain. Short-duration peak flow, channel pattern, average stream gradient of about 2–3 ft./mile, and bank stabilization by dense vegetation are major parameters controlling the depositional pattern of coarse sand and pebble gravel of the Amite and Colorado rivers. Stratification is directly related to specific depositional features and consists of: large-scale trough-fill cross-stratification in the scour pool; trough-fill cross-stratification and foreset cross-stratification in the lower point bar; parallel laminae, large foreset cross-stratification, and trough-fill cross-stratification in the chute bar; parallel inclined laminae, climbing ripple laminae, and mud drapes in the chute fill; and parallel inclined laminae, mud drape, and foreset cross-stratification in overbank, flood-plain deposits. Fundamental differences between point bars of bed-load streams (low suspended load/bed load ratio) and mixed-load streams (high suspended load/bed load ratio) are that upper point bar sediments with small trough sets and parallel inclined laminae occur only in fine-grained (mixed load) fluvial deposits, and large scale foresets of chute bars are common to coarse-grained (bed load) fluvial deposits but are not found in fine-grained fluvial deposits. Upward fining sequences, characteristic of fine-grained fluvial deposits, are uncommon in sediments deposited by bed-load streams such as the Amite and Colorado rivers. The Simsboro Sandstone consists mainly of scour pool, lower point bar, and chute bar sediments. Chute fill and flood-plain deposits are preserved only in the highest stratigraphic sequence. Pleistocene Colorado River deposits display the same sequence of stratification types as the Simsboro but are composed of coarser material.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Architectural-Element Analysis: A New Method of Facies Analysis Applied to Fluvial Deposits

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a new method of analysis for fluvial facies, which subdivides fluvic deposits into local suites consisting of one or more of a set of eight basic three-dimensional architectural elements.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of the braided-river depositional environment

TL;DR: A review of more than sixty recent papers on modern and ancient braided-stream deposits can be found in this article, where several sedimentation models have been developed from a review of recent work.
Journal ArticleDOI

A genetic classification of floodplains

TL;DR: In this paper, the relation between a stream's ability to entrain and transport sediment and the erosional resistance of floodplain alluvium that forms the channel boundary provides the basis for a genetic classification of floodplains.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inclined heterolithic stratification—Terminology, description, interpretation and significance

TL;DR: Inclined Heterolithic Stratification (IHS) as discussed by the authors is a nomenclature for inclined stratified sedimentary units. But it is not suitable for the case of point bars.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies in fluviatile sedimentation: Bars, bar-complexes and sandstone sheets (low-sinuosity braided streams) in the brownstones (L. devonian), welsh borders

TL;DR: The fine to very coarse sandstones, gravelly sandstones and intraformational conglomerates of the mid to upper Brownstones are excellently exposed in large fresh road cuttings near Ross-on-Wye in the southern Welsh Borders.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Brazos River bar [Texas]; a study in the significance of grain size parameters

TL;DR: In this paper, a bar on the Brazos River near Calvert, Texas, has been analyzed in order to determine the geologic meaning of certain grain size parameters and to study the behavior of the size fractions with transport.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Distinction between Grain Size and Mineral Composition in Sedimentary-Rock Nomenclature

TL;DR: In this paper, a system of grain-size nomenclature of terrigenous sediments and sedimentary rocks is introduced wherein fifteen major textural groups are defined on the ratios of gravel, sand, silt, and clay.
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A review of the origin and characteristics of recent alluvial sediments

TL;DR: In this paper, the geometrical, textural, structural, and biological characteristics of alluvial sediments are reviewed with respect to their geometrically, texturally, structural and biological properties, which are related to the physiographic occurrence and hydraulic geometry of streams and to the dynamics of flowing water.
Journal ArticleDOI

Speculations Concerning Paleohydrologic Controls of Terrestrial Sedimentation

TL;DR: A review of the relations existing between the morphologic and hydrologic characteristics of river channels demonstrates that fluvial sedimentary deposits are significantly different depending upon the nature of the sediment load moved through the channel.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flood deposits, Bijou Creek, Colorado, JUNE =")(

TL;DR: A study was made to determine the character of deposits of a major flood along Bijou Creek, Colorado as mentioned in this paper, which consist of sand that was laid down in mid-June, 1965 during rapid movement of the upper flow regime.