Chapter 3 History of continental shelf and slope sedimentation on the US middle Atlantic margin

Author:

Miller Kenneth G.1,Browning James V.1,Mountain Gregory S.1,Sheridan Robert E.1,Sugarman Peter J.2,Glenn Scott3,Christensen Beth A.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA

2. New Jersey Geological Survey, PO Box 427, Trenton, NJ 08625, USA

3. Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA

4. Environmental Studies Program, Adelphi University, Garden City, NY 11530, USA

Abstract

AbstractWe describe sedimentation on the storm-dominated, microtidal, continental shelf and slope of the eastern US passive continental margin between the Hudson and Wilmington canyons. Sediments here recorded sea-level changes over the past 100 myr and provide a classic example of the interplay among eustasy, tectonism and sedimentation. Long-term margin evolution reflects changes in morphology from a Late Cretaceous–Eocene ramp to Oligocene and younger prograding clinothem geometries, a transition found on several other margins. Deltaic systems influenced Cretaceous and Miocene sedimentation, but, in general, the Maastrichtian–Palaeogene shelf was starved of sediment. Pre-Pleistocene sequences follow a repetitive model, with fining- and coarsening-upward successions associated with transgressions and regressions, respectively. Pleistocene–Holocene sequences are generally quite thin (<20 m per sequence) and discontinuous beneath the modern shelf, reflecting starved sedimentation under high rates of eustatic change and low rates of subsidence. However, Pleistocene sequences can attain great thickness (hundreds of metres) beneath the outermost shelf and continental slope. Holocene sedimentation on the inner shelf reflects transgression, decelerating from rates of approximately 3–4 to around 2 mm a−1 from 5 to 2 ka. Modern shelf sedimentation primarily reflects palimpsest sand sheets plastered and reworked into geostrophically controlled nearshore and shelf shore-oblique sand ridges, and does not provide a good analogue for pre-Pleistocene deposition.Supplementary material:References used in the comparison of all dates for New Jersey localities in Figure 3.8 are available at http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/SUP18749.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology

Reference100 articles.

1. Alexander C. Sommerfield C. (2003) Transactions of the American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2003, Sedimentology and age control of late Quaternary New Jersey shelf deposits (American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC) Abstract OS52B-0909.

2. Clastic sequences developed during late Quaternary glacio-eustatic sea-level fluctuations on a passive margin: Example from the inner continental shelf near Barnegat Inlet, New Jersey

3. Miocene to Pleistocene sand-rich sequences and sea-level changes at the New Jersey outer shelf: results from Leg 174A;Austin;JOIDES Journal,1998

4. Deglacial sea-level record from Tahiti corals and the timing of global meltwater discharge

5. Effect of Cenozoic ice sheet fluctuations in Antarctica on the stratigraphic signature of the Neogene

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