Upper Cretaceous chalk facies and depositional history recorded in the Mona-1 core, Mona Ridge, Danish North Sea: Plate 1

The 331 m long core from the Mona-1 well in the Danish North Sea spans almost the entire Upper Cretaceous Chalk Group but only about 10% of Late Cretaceous time is represented. The succession comprises 14 facies representing pelagic deposition, turbidity flow, and mass-transport processes, including...

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Main Authors: Surlyk, Finn, Anderskouv, Kresten
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland 2011-12-01
Series:Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.geus.dk/publications/bull/nr25/nr25_plate%201.pdf
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spelling doaj-20ca3046d92c47468bbdf85dd23b6aec2020-11-25T02:58:04ZengGeological Survey of Denmark and GreenlandGeological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin1604-81562011-12-01252Upper Cretaceous chalk facies and depositional history recorded in the Mona-1 core, Mona Ridge, Danish North Sea: Plate 1Surlyk, FinnAnderskouv, KrestenThe 331 m long core from the Mona-1 well in the Danish North Sea spans almost the entire Upper Cretaceous Chalk Group but only about 10% of Late Cretaceous time is represented. The succession comprises 14 facies representing pelagic deposition, turbidity flow, and mass-transport processes, including mudflow, debris flow, and slumping. Pelagic deposits vary mainly in terms of the concentration of siliciclastic material, the trace-fossil assemblage, and the presence or ab¬sence of primary sedimentary structures. Pelagic sedimentation was probably punctuated by the deposition of thin turbidites, and the resultant deposits were thoroughly bioturbated if deposited during normal oxygenation at the sea floor. Periodic benthic dysoxia resulted in the preservation of primary structures, as represented by laminated chalk which consists of thin pelagic laminae alternating with thin turbidites. In addition to the thin turbidites in the laminated chalk, four dif¬ferent turbidite facies are interpreted as representing high- to low-energy flows. Clast-supported chalk conglomerates have previously not been differentiated from other turbidites, but are here interpreted to be directly related to the down-slope evolution of debris flows. Debris flows are rep¬resented by matrix-supported conglomerates, which form one of the most common facies in the succession. High-concentration, gravity-driven suspension flows passed into dilute visco-plastic flows during the final stages of deposition and resulted in the deposition of structureless chalks. Limited shear deformation produced distinct quasi-facies from which the precursor facies can be deduced, whereas intense or continued shear deformation produced a shear-banded quasi-facies from which the precursor facies cannot be deduced in all cases. A series of major slump packages (14–18 in total) are interpreted, forming over 40% of the succession; debrites appear to be the most common precursor facies involved in slumping. The vertical succession of facies records an earliest Cenomanian facies shift from dominantly siliciclastic to chalk deposition. The Cenomanian – late Campanian period was dominated by erosion or sediment by-pass with minor associated mass-transport deposits preserved. Basin fill¬ing by pelagites and turbidites prevailed in the late Campanian, whereas Maastrichtian pelagic deposition was interrupted by increasingly frequent and voluminous mass-transport events.http://www.geus.dk/publications/bull/nr25/nr25_plate%201.pdfUpper Cretaceous chalkDanish North SeaMona-1facies analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Surlyk, Finn
Anderskouv, Kresten
spellingShingle Surlyk, Finn
Anderskouv, Kresten
Upper Cretaceous chalk facies and depositional history recorded in the Mona-1 core, Mona Ridge, Danish North Sea: Plate 1
Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin
Upper Cretaceous chalk
Danish North Sea
Mona-1
facies analysis
author_facet Surlyk, Finn
Anderskouv, Kresten
author_sort Surlyk, Finn
title Upper Cretaceous chalk facies and depositional history recorded in the Mona-1 core, Mona Ridge, Danish North Sea: Plate 1
title_short Upper Cretaceous chalk facies and depositional history recorded in the Mona-1 core, Mona Ridge, Danish North Sea: Plate 1
title_full Upper Cretaceous chalk facies and depositional history recorded in the Mona-1 core, Mona Ridge, Danish North Sea: Plate 1
title_fullStr Upper Cretaceous chalk facies and depositional history recorded in the Mona-1 core, Mona Ridge, Danish North Sea: Plate 1
title_full_unstemmed Upper Cretaceous chalk facies and depositional history recorded in the Mona-1 core, Mona Ridge, Danish North Sea: Plate 1
title_sort upper cretaceous chalk facies and depositional history recorded in the mona-1 core, mona ridge, danish north sea: plate 1
publisher Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland
series Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin
issn 1604-8156
publishDate 2011-12-01
description The 331 m long core from the Mona-1 well in the Danish North Sea spans almost the entire Upper Cretaceous Chalk Group but only about 10% of Late Cretaceous time is represented. The succession comprises 14 facies representing pelagic deposition, turbidity flow, and mass-transport processes, including mudflow, debris flow, and slumping. Pelagic deposits vary mainly in terms of the concentration of siliciclastic material, the trace-fossil assemblage, and the presence or ab¬sence of primary sedimentary structures. Pelagic sedimentation was probably punctuated by the deposition of thin turbidites, and the resultant deposits were thoroughly bioturbated if deposited during normal oxygenation at the sea floor. Periodic benthic dysoxia resulted in the preservation of primary structures, as represented by laminated chalk which consists of thin pelagic laminae alternating with thin turbidites. In addition to the thin turbidites in the laminated chalk, four dif¬ferent turbidite facies are interpreted as representing high- to low-energy flows. Clast-supported chalk conglomerates have previously not been differentiated from other turbidites, but are here interpreted to be directly related to the down-slope evolution of debris flows. Debris flows are rep¬resented by matrix-supported conglomerates, which form one of the most common facies in the succession. High-concentration, gravity-driven suspension flows passed into dilute visco-plastic flows during the final stages of deposition and resulted in the deposition of structureless chalks. Limited shear deformation produced distinct quasi-facies from which the precursor facies can be deduced, whereas intense or continued shear deformation produced a shear-banded quasi-facies from which the precursor facies cannot be deduced in all cases. A series of major slump packages (14–18 in total) are interpreted, forming over 40% of the succession; debrites appear to be the most common precursor facies involved in slumping. The vertical succession of facies records an earliest Cenomanian facies shift from dominantly siliciclastic to chalk deposition. The Cenomanian – late Campanian period was dominated by erosion or sediment by-pass with minor associated mass-transport deposits preserved. Basin fill¬ing by pelagites and turbidites prevailed in the late Campanian, whereas Maastrichtian pelagic deposition was interrupted by increasingly frequent and voluminous mass-transport events.
topic Upper Cretaceous chalk
Danish North Sea
Mona-1
facies analysis
url http://www.geus.dk/publications/bull/nr25/nr25_plate%201.pdf
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