Crevasse splay processes and deposits in an ancient distributive fluvial system: the lower Beaufort Group, South Africa

Alice Gulliford, Stephen Flint

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    Abstract

    Up to 12% of the mud-prone, ephemeral distributive fluvial system stratigraphy in the Permo-Triassic lower Beaufort Group, South Africa, comprises tabular fine-grained sandstone to coarse-grained siltstone bodies, which are interpreted as proximal to distal crevasse splay deposits. Crevasse splay sandstones predominantly exhibit ripple to climbing ripple cross-lamination, with some structureless and planar laminated beds. A hierarchical architectural scheme is adopted, in which each ~1 m thick crevasse splay elements extend for tens to several hundreds of meters laterally, and stack with other splay elements to form crevasse splay sets up to 4 m thick and several kilometers in width and length. Paleosols and nodular horizons developed during periods, or in areas of reduced overbank flooding and are used to subdivide the stratigraphy, separating crevasse splay sets. Deposits from crevasse splays differ from frontal splays as their proximal deposits are much thinner and narrower, with paleocurrents oblique to the main paleochannel. In order for crevasse splay sets to develop, the parent channel belt and the location where crevasse splays form must stay relatively fixed during a period of multiple flood events. Beaufort Group splays have similar geometries to those of perennial rivers but exhibit more lateral variability in facies, which is interpreted to be the result of more extreme fluctuations in discharge regime. Sharp-based crevasse splay packages are associated with channel avulsion, but most are characterized by a gradual coarsening upward, interpreted to represent progradation. The dominance of progradational splays beneath channel belt deposits may be more characteristic of progradational stratigraphy in a distributive fluvial system rather than dominated by avulsion processes in a trunk river system. This stratigraphic motif may therefore be an additional criterion for recognition of distributive fluvial systems in the ancient record.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1-18
    JournalSedimentary Geology
    Volume358
    Early online date15 Jun 2017
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2017

    Keywords

    • crevasse splay
    • overbank
    • avulsion
    • distributive fluvial system
    • Karoo Basin

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