Impacts of Tectonic Subsidence on Basin Depth and Delta Lobe Building

Author:

Dong Tian Y.1ORCID,Nittrouer Jeffrey A.2,Carlson Brandee3,McElroy Brandon4ORCID,Il’icheva Elena5,Pavlov Maksim5,Ma Hongbo67ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Earth, Environmental, and Marine Sciences University of Texas Rio Grande Valley TX Edinburg USA

2. Department of Geosciences Texas Tech University TX Lubbock USA

3. Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences University of Houston TX Houston USA

4. Department of Geology and Geophysics University of Wyoming WY Laramie USA

5. Laboratory of Hydrology and Climatology V.B. Sochava Institute of Geography Siberian Branch Russian Academy of Sciences Irkutsk Russian

6. State Key Laboratory of Hydro‐Science and Engineering Tsinghua University Beijing China

7. Department of Hydraulic Engineering Tsinghua University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractChannel avulsions on river deltas are the primary means to distribute sediment and build land at the coastline. Many studies have detailed how avulsions generate delta lobes, whereby multiple lobes amalgamate to form a fan‐shaped deposit. These studies often assume a steady subsidence and uniform basin depth. In nature, however, lobe building is disrupted by variable subsidence, and progradation of lobes into basins with variable depth: conditions that are prevalent for tectonically active areas. Herein, we explore sediment dispersal and deposition patterns across scales using measurements of delta and basin morphology compiled from field surveys and remote sensing, collected over 150 years, from the Selenga Delta (Baikal Rift Zone), Russia. Tectonic subsidence events, associated with earthquakes on normal faults crossing the delta, displace portions of the topset several meters below mean lake level. This allogenic process increases regional river gradient and triggers lobe‐switching avulsions. The timescale for these episodes is shorter than the predicted autogenic lobe avulsion timescale. During quiescent periods between subsidence events, channel‐scale avulsions occur relatively frequently because of in‐channel sediment aggradation, dispersing sediment to regional lows of the delta. Avulsion settings for the Selenga Delta preserve discrete stratal packages that could contain predominately deep channels. Exploring the interplay between tectonic subsidence and sediment accumulation patterns will improve interpretations of stratigraphy from active margins and basin models.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth-Surface Processes,Geophysics

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