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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/32517
Title: Facies architecture, paleodischarge, and the variability of confluence scours in Cretaceous Rivers: Ferron Sandstone, Utah and Torrivio Sandstone, New Mexico, USA
Authors: Sharma, Sandeep
Advisor: Bhattacharya, Janok
Department: Earth and Environmental Sciences
Publication Date: 2025
Abstract: This thesis is focused on the integration of facies architectural analysis with 3D drone imagery, to provide quantitative analysis of ancient North American Cretaceous river systems. Paleo-digital elevation models were used for estimating drainage area, consistent with previous paleogeographic reconstructions. Monte-Carlo simulations, in combination with physics-based, empirically-derived equations, were used to estimate paleodischarge and downstream sediment volumes. This represents novel use of datasets and methods in quantitative estimation of ancient fluvial systems. This quantitative approach has broad implications for source-to-sink scaling relationships, such as predicting ancient drainage areas, that can be important in paleotectonic and paleogeographic reconstructions, as well as prediction of downstream sink volumes, which have economic importance, as these estimations can be used in hydrocarbon exploration in predicting the volumes of both the reservoir as well as the source rocks. These are also useful for characterizing aquifers to assess aquifer volume and flow pathways. This thesis also addresses a number of on-going scientific debates. The lack of braided rivers imaged using 3D seismic data has raised questions about the preservability of braided river deposits. This thesis provides an unequivocal example of a braided fluvial system from the late Cretaceous Torrivio Sandstone in New Mexico, USA. There is also some debate on how to distinguish autogenic scours from allogenic scour surfaces in ancient systems, with implications for identifying regional sequences. This thesis presents examples of a wide variety of autogenic fluvial scour surfaces, including bar-top hollows, bar-scale confluence scours and channel scours, ranging from normal small-scale channel confluence scours to larger tributary junction scours. The criteria described in this thesis enable the distinction of autogenic scours from regional allogenic incised valley surfaces that define sequence boundaries. The thesis also addresses the long debated concept of “Big River” systems. Integration of qualitative facies architecture analysis with quantitative estimates, derived using novel datasets and methods, show that the scale of major depositional elements can be used to estimate the size and scale of formative rivers and help to distinguish deposits of continental-scale river systems from the smaller rivers documented herein.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/32517
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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