File:M31F18.jpg
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Cores of distributary-mouth bar sequence. Diameter of cores is 13 cm (5 in.). A. Smooth, gray, partially laminated clays of the prodelta deposits. B. Steeply dipping sand-silt laminations characteristic of block slumping often found in the prodelta environment. C. Small lenticular laminations and graded parallel silt laminations common near the top of the prodelta environment. D. Alternating sand, silt, and silty clay laminations in the lower part of the distal bar environment. E. Well-developed parallel silt and sand laminations showing graded bedding and small-scale ripple laminations common in the distal bar deposits. F. Lenticular sand laminatio s representing "starved current ripples" and small-scale ripple laminations common in the transition zone between the distal bar and distributary-mouth bar. G. Slump structure common near the shear plane in a distributary-mouth bar sequence that has mass-moved seaward. H. Cross laminations common in the distributary-mouth bar sands. The dark material is transported organic debris. I. Large-scale cross laminations common near the top part of the distributary-mouth bar deposits. The dark material is transported organic debris. J. Alternating silty sand and clay layers common to the small overbank splays that cap the distributary-mouth bar deposits. Coleman, J. M., and D. B. Prior, 1981, Deltaic environments of deposition in P. A. Scholle and D. Spearing, eds., Sandstone depositional environments: AAPG Memoir 31, p. 139-178.
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current | 18:16, 18 August 2014 | 1,349 × 994 (1.86 MB) | Molyneux (talk | contribs) | Cores of distributary-mouth bar sequence. Diameter of cores is 13 cm (5 in.). A. Smooth, gray, partially laminated clays of the prodelta deposits. B. Steeply dipping sand-silt laminations characteristic of block slumping often found in the prodelta env... |
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