Sedimentation and basin-fill history of the Neogene clastic succession exposed in the southeastern fold belt of the Bengal Basin, Bangladesh: a high-resolution sequence stratigraphic approach
The Tertiary basin-fill history of the Bengal Basin suffers from oversimplification. The interpretation of the sedimentary history of the basin should be consistent with the evolution of its three geo-tectonic provinces, namely, western, northeastern and eastern. Each province has its own basin gene...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Sedimentary geology 2003-02, Vol.155 (3), p.227-270 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The Tertiary basin-fill history of the Bengal Basin suffers from oversimplification. The interpretation of the sedimentary history of the basin should be consistent with the evolution of its three geo-tectonic provinces, namely, western, northeastern and eastern. Each province has its own basin generation and sediment-fill history related mainly to the Indo-Burmese and subordinately to the Indo-Tibetan plate convergence. This paper is mainly concerned with facies and facies sequence analysis of the Neogene clastic succession within the subduction-related active margin setting (oblique convergence) in the southeastern fold belt of the Bengal Basin. Detailed fieldwork was carried out in the Sitapahar anticline of the Rangamati area and the Mirinja anticline of the Lama area. The study shows that the exposed Neogene succession represents an overall basinward progradation from deep marine through shallow marine to continental–fluvial environments. Based on regionally correlatable erosion surfaces the entire succession (3000+ m thick) has been grouped into three composite sequences C, B and A, from oldest to youngest. Composite sequence C begins with deep-water base-of-slope clastics overlain by thick slope mud that passes upward into shallow marine and nearshore clastics. Composite sequence B characteristically depicts tide-dominated open-marine to coastal depositional systems with evidence of cyclic marine regression and transgression. Repetitive occurrence of incised channel, tidal inlet, tidal ridge/shoal, tidal flat and other tidal deposits is separated by shelfal mudstone. Most of the sandbodies contain a full spectrum of tide-generated structures (e.g. herringbone cross-bedding, bundle structure, mud couplet, bipolar cross-lamination with reactivation surfaces, ‘tidal’ bedding). Storm activities appear to have played a subordinate role in the mid and inner shelf region.
Rizocorallium,
Rosselia,
Planolites and
Zoophycos are the dominant ichnofacies within the shelfal mudstone. This paralic sedimentation of Neogene succession in the study area can serve as a good point of reference for tide-dominated regressive shelf depositional systems. The top of the composite sequence B is marked by a pronounced erosion surface indicating the final phase of marine regression followed by the gradual establishment of continental–fluvial depositional systems represented by composite sequence A. In this composite sequence, stacked channel bars of low-sinuosity braided rive |
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ISSN: | 0037-0738 1879-0968 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0037-0738(02)00182-3 |