Influences of Storm Erosion and Deposition on Rhythmites of the Upper Wenchang Formation (Upper Ordovician) Around Tonglu, Zhejiang Province, China
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-2004
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.1306/010304740527
Abstract
Tonglu rhythmites (Upper Ordovician) in Zhejiang Province, east-central China, display three orders of cyclicity in sandstone and mudstone layer thickness. Millimeter-thick alternations of sandstone and mudstone laminae are ascribed to single tidal cycles. Centimeter-thick alternations of sand-dominated layers (SDLs) and mud-dominated layers (MDLs) are interpreted to be related to alternation of storm and calm weather conditions with a periodicity longer than that forced by neap-spring tidal cyclicity. The SDLs are interpreted as storm deposits on the basis of presence of scour structures, abundant intraformational mud pebbles, oscillation ripples, and thinning-upward trends in the sandstone laminae. A third, meter-thick cycle of variations in sandstone-lamina thickness is interpreted as a reflection of cross-shore changes in coastal dynamics and water depth in the subtidal-intertidal environment.
Storm waves, usually considered to be random destructive factors to normal cyclic deposits, are here highlighted as effective agents of sediment transport and deposition of the sand-dominated layers. This study aims at improving our facies-level understanding of the genesis and preservation of storm-related tidal-flat rhythmites on open coasts, and highlights the fact that storm related facies can mimic the cyclicity that is commonly ascribed to neap-spring tidal variation.
Rights Information
Citation / Publisher Attribution
Journal of Sedimentary Research, v. 74, issue 4, p. 527-536
Scholar Commons Citation
Fan, Daidu; Li, Congxian; and Wang, Ping, "Influences of Storm Erosion and Deposition on Rhythmites of the Upper Wenchang Formation (Upper Ordovician) Around Tonglu, Zhejiang Province, China" (2004). Geology Faculty Publications. 204.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/gly_facpub/204
Full Text URL
https://doi.org/10.1306/010304740527