Outcrop expression of maximum regressive, maximum flooding, and ravinement surfaces
Six stratigraphic surfaces define the important boundaries of stratigraphic sequences and their system tracts. The significance of these surfaces in sequence stratigraphy is based on a model of baselevel change, a model that, in turn is based on interpretation of facies and stratigraphic trends, experimental studies (e.g., flumes), theoretical considerations, and numerical simulations. The baselevel model dictates that surfaces develop as a function of changes in sediment accommodation and supply, migrating shorelines, and the consequent shifts in environmental conditions.
The diagnostic criteria for recognition of these surfaces in outcrop and core are based on sedimentary, bio-, and chemical facies and, if the exposure is panoramic, bed geometries such as onlap and offlap.
Five of these surfaces are included here; there are no criteria that ensure definitive identification of correlative conformities in outcrop. These are best identified on seismic profiles where reflections can be traced from the shelf or platform to the deeper basin.
A companion article looks at sequence stratigraphic surfaces formed during baselevel fall.
Several Sverdrup Basin images here and in the companion post on Falling baselevel have been generously donated by Ashton Embry. Some key references are added at the bottom of the page.
Maximum Regressive surface
The maximum regressive surface (MRS – also called the transgressive surface) forms when baselevel fall and the shoreline trajectory turn around and transgression begins. It represents the transition from progradation to retrogradation where baselevel rise is faster than sediment supply. These conditions dictate widespread changes in the dynamics of sedimentation such that the MRS may extend from the shelf to coastal and fluvial environments (because all these environments are potentially affected). Below the shoreface the MRS will be conformable; closer to the shoreline the surface may be scoured locally. The MRS is overlain by transgressive stratigraphy that usually terminates in a maximum flooding surface. However, the MRS may be removed during transgression depending on the depth of erosion beneath the shoreface ravinement surface.
In outcrop the MRS will tend to overlie coarsening-upward shelf-shoreface deposits (this is where it has the highest preservation potential). It will also overlie lowstand deposits if they are preserved. The succession between the MRS and maximum flood surface will also be condensed if sedimentation rates are low.
Bowser Basin, northern British Columbia
Sverdrup Basin, Arctic Canada
Shoreface ravinement surfaces (SR)
Shoreface ravinement is the product of shoreface erosion during baselevel rise. They extend up depositional dip from the most seaward extent of a shoreline at the beginning of (relative) baselevel rise, to the landward extent at the end of baselevel rise. The surface is discordant, truncating lagoonal, estuarine and in some cases fluvial strata deposited during the previous episode of baselevel fall. Erosion may also remove the maximum regressive surface (MRS) and the subaerial unconformity. Ravinement surfaces are onlapped by shallow marine deposits commonly organised as deepening-upward, retrogradational successions (for a review see Cattaneo and Steel, 2003).
Ravinement surfaces are categorised in two ways. The first relies on an interpretation of the main erosion processes involved (based on stratigraphic trend and facies associations). Shoreface erosion by waves tends to occur on open coasts (wave ravinement); shoreface erosion by tidal currents predominates in coastal embayments, lagoons and estuaries (tidal ravinement). However, the wave-generated surface may eventually override and completely remove the tide-generated surface as the shoreline migrates landward.
Ravinement surfaces can also be categorised on the basis of the regional extent of the discordance and the duration of the hiatus that it represents. Again, two types of surfaces are recognized (e.g., Embry, 2009, open access):
– Shoreface ravinement unconformable (SR-U), that has regional significance as an unconformity (at least in terms of its extent across a sedimentary basin); the RS-U may remove earlier formed surfaces like the MRS and subaerial unconformity.
– Shoreface ravinement diastemic (SR-D) is of more local extent and represents a hiatus that is not generally resolvable biostratigraphically or chronostratigraphically. Erosion beneath this diastem is not so great as to remove a subaerial unconformity. For example, excavation by channels usually results in some kind of diastemic discordance.
I prefer this descriptive scheme because it makes a statement about the chronostratigraphic significance of the RS that does not rely on interpretation of the dominant erosional process. However, the SR-U and SR-D can be qualified as wave- or tide- dominant if sufficient information is available.
Shoreface ravinement unconformable
Taranaki Basin, New Zealand
Sverdrup Basin, Arctic Canada
Shoreface ravinement diastemic South Auckland, New Zealand
Sverdrup Basin, Arctic Canada
Maximum Flooding Surfaces
Sverdrup Basin, Arctic Canada
Bowser Basin, northern British Columbia
Some Sverdrup Basin sequence stratigraphy papers
Embry, A.F. 2011. Petroleum prospectivity of the Triassic–Jurassic succession of Sverdrup Basin, Canadian Arctic Archipelago. In Chapter 36, Spencer, A. M., Embry, A. F., Gautier, D. L., Stoupakova, A. V. & Sørensen, K. (eds) Arctic Petroleum Geology. Geological Society, London, Memoirs, 35, p. 545–558.
Embry, A.F., and Johannessen, E.P. 2017Two Approaches to Sequence Stratigraphy. In; Chapter 27, Stratigraphy & Timescales, Volume 2, Elsevier. PDF available
Embry, A.F. 2018. Triassic history of the Tanquary High in NE Sverdrup Basin, Canadian Arctic Archipelago. In; Piepjohn, K., Strauss, J.V., Reinhardt, L., and McClelland, W.C., eds., Circum-Arctic Structural Events: Tectonic Evolution of the Arctic Margins and Trans-Arctic Links with Adjacent Orogens. The Geological Society of America Special Paper 541, p. 285–301.
Embry, A., and B. Beauchamp. 2019. Chapter 14. Sverdrup Basin. In; A.D. Miall, (Ed.), The Sedimentary Basins of the United States and Canada, Elsevier, p.559-592.
Ricketts, B.D. and Stephenson, R.A.1994. The demise of Sverdrup Basin: Late Cretaceous – Paleogene sequence stratigraphy and forward modelling. Journal of Sedimentary Research (1994) 64 (4b): 516–530.