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Stratigraphic Architecture and Depositional History of Laterally-accreted Channel Fills in the Lower Isaac Formation, Windermere Supergroup, British Columbia, Canada

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Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa

Abstract

Continental slope channels, which serve as the primary conduits for sediment transport into the deep marine, occasionally become sites of sediment deposition with excellent reservoir potential. Increasingly reported in the literature are subsurface channel fills exhibiting shingled seismic reflectors that are interpreted to have formed by lateral channel migration. In lower Isaac Formation channels inclined strata are observed but at a lateral scale that is far below industry-seismic detection. Distinctively these flat-based channels are filled with coarse-grained sandstone that transitions abruptly and obliquely upwards into thin, fine grained turbidites. Like rivers, lateral accretion in Isaac channels is interpreted to be the result of the interaction of inertial and pressure forces, but in highly turbulent, highly density-stratified turbidity currents. This resulted in the formation of two superimposed secondary circulation cells that caused enhanced erosion on the outer bank and preferential deposition of coarse-grained sediment along the inner bank.

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deep-marine slope channels, sinuous channels, lateral accretion deposits (LAD), Neoproterozoic, Windermere Supergroup, stratified turbidity currents

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