| An interplay of hydrologic and biologic factors produces carbonates in place. Deposition of carbonate sediments is limited to water that is warm, shallow, clear, sunlit, and free of suspended clay. When these conditions prevail, carbonates accumulate rapidly. | | An interplay of hydrologic and biologic factors produces carbonates in place. Deposition of carbonate sediments is limited to water that is warm, shallow, clear, sunlit, and free of suspended clay. When these conditions prevail, carbonates accumulate rapidly. |
− | [[file:predicting-reservoir-system-quality-and-performance_fig9-66.png|thumb|{{figure number|1}}Typical carbonate facies that develop within the three zones.<ref name=ch09r52>Sarg, J., F., 1988, Carbonate sequence stratigraphy, in Wilgus, C., K., Hastings, B., S., Kendall, C., G. St. C., Posamentier, H., W., Ross, C., A., Van Wagoner, J., C., eds., Sea Level Changes: An Integrated Approach: SEPM Special Publication 42, p. 155–182.</ref> Copyright: SEPM.]] | + | [[file:predicting-reservoir-system-quality-and-performance_fig9-66.png|thumb|300px|{{figure number|1}}Typical carbonate facies that develop within the three zones.<ref name=ch09r52>Sarg, J., F., 1988, Carbonate sequence stratigraphy, in Wilgus, C., K., Hastings, B., S., Kendall, C., G. St. C., Posamentier, H., W., Ross, C., A., Van Wagoner, J., C., eds., Sea Level Changes: An Integrated Approach: SEPM Special Publication 42, p. 155–182.</ref> Copyright: SEPM.]] |
| The high accumulation rates of carbonate sediments relative to subsidence generate shelf-to-basin submarine topography with a seaward face of variable steepness. As shown in the diagram in [[:file:predicting-reservoir-system-quality-and-performance_fig9-67.png|Figure 2]], a platform's seaward edge steepens with time because subsidence cannot keep pace with carbonate sedimentation. | | The high accumulation rates of carbonate sediments relative to subsidence generate shelf-to-basin submarine topography with a seaward face of variable steepness. As shown in the diagram in [[:file:predicting-reservoir-system-quality-and-performance_fig9-67.png|Figure 2]], a platform's seaward edge steepens with time because subsidence cannot keep pace with carbonate sedimentation. |