4.7 Article

Outcrop characterization of a submarine channel-lobe complex: The Lower Mount Messenger Formation, Taranaki Basin, New Zealand

Journal

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Volume 71, Issue -, Pages 360-390

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2016.01.004

Keywords

Mount Messenger Formation; Taranaki Basin; Deep-water deposits; Basin floor; Channel-lobe complex; Levee; Thick-bedded turbidites; Dune cross-stratification; Mass-transport deposits; High-density turbidity currents; Lobe; Proximal splay; Confined basin

Funding

  1. Stanford Project on Deep-water Depositional Systems (SPODDS)
  2. Aera
  3. Anadarko
  4. BHP Billiton
  5. Chevron
  6. ConocoPhillips
  7. Eni
  8. Hess
  9. Neos
  10. Nexen
  11. Occidental
  12. Petrobras
  13. Rohol-Aufsuchungs Aktiengesellschaft (RAG)
  14. Reliance
  15. Saudi Aramco
  16. Schlumberger
  17. Shell
  18. Talisman Energy
  19. Venoco Inc.
  20. Stanford University School of Earth Sciences
  21. SPODDS

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The Upper Miocene Lower Mount Messenger Formation (LMMF) exposed in cliffs along the west coast of the North Island, New Zealand, includes 650 m of thick-bedded, fine-to very fine-grained sandstone, interbedded sandstone and mudstone, mudstone, and mass transport deposits. Deposition was from low- and high-density turbidity currents and small to very large, intraformational slumps, slides, and debris flows. The LMMF comprises five major facies associations (FA) representing the principal depositional settings within which the sediments accumulated: (FA1) distal to medial frontal lobes and lobe complexes, (FA2) more proximal frontal lobes and crevasse and/or overbank splays; (FM) submarine channels; (FA4) levees; and (FA5) mass transport deposits (MTDs). The lower, northern part of the LMMF is dominated by FA1 and FA2 deposited as part of a large, amalgamated frontal lobe system. This section is overlain and, near the top, interbedded with FM levee deposits. The top of the LMMF includes a channel complex that interfingers with the levees and related lateral splay deposits. The submarine channel belt was nearly 3 km wide and delivered the sediments to the lobe complex more than 15 km downslope. The channels are filled largely with the deposits of low-density turbidity currents characterized by plane lamination and climbing-ripple cross-lamination. In contrast, lobes contain thick-bedded massive and cross-stratified sandstones deposited by high-density flows. This contrast of apparently higher energy, high-density turbidite divisions in the lobes and lower energy, low-density deposits in the upslope channel fill is thought to reflect diachronous deposition of these otherwise contiguous parts of the deposystem. When sand deposition was occurring on the lobe complex, large, high-density flows moved through and largely bypassed or actively eroded the upslope channels. As flow volumes and strength declined, deposition on the lobe complex waned and sand deposition from low-density currents occurred within the channels, with little sediment other than mud reaching the lobe complex. The overall northward paleoflow direction in the outcrop window is parallel to the inferred eastern paleoslope. The abundance of massive turbidites in the most downslope deposits and evidence for correlative deposits with south- and southwest-directed paleocurrents a short distance to the north suggest that the basin may have been ponded. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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