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00:00 | mhm. I might put all these . This is more Exactly. And |
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00:16 | field trip type. Lot of But mm. Anyway, so I |
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00:40 | talked talked talked a little about another system that Farron sandstone in Utah and |
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00:49 | is uh this is your outcrop example you're playing around with. So we'll |
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00:55 | some correlations that might look similar. there's a lot of controversy about what |
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01:05 | ah what causes sea level change. the cretaceous, the cretaceous is generally |
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01:15 | to be a greenhouse. Some people it a an ultra greenhouse, so |
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01:20 | one of the warmer times in earth , sea level was much higher than |
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01:24 | is today. And yet there's still of high frequency sea level changes. |
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01:30 | question is what controls that. So miller, who's at Rutgers University has |
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01:37 | that ephemeral ice sheets and antarctic could caused sea level changes. If you |
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01:42 | at the right hand diagram here, shows there's Antarctica at the top, |
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01:47 | of course now is completely glaciation and go further back in time. You |
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01:51 | the ice sheets get smaller and smaller million years ago and smaller. And |
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01:57 | here we are, about 90 million , which is the mediterranean, which |
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02:01 | the time period that I've been And he suggests that 15 to 25 |
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02:07 | sea level falls. So plus -30-50 of sea level would be compatible with |
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02:13 | growth decay of ephemeral antarctic ice Is there any evidence for these ice |
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02:20 | ? Well, Antarctica's right now is covered by ice that's probably the least |
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02:24 | of all the continents. So the answer is, you don't really |
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02:30 | uh, since militants work, there's some other hypotheses for controls on |
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02:37 | use static sea level change. We're to put aside tectonics, you |
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02:41 | that when oceans grow and when oceans , young, hot oceanic crust is |
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02:48 | a little bit higher in the stratosphere displaces that water onto the continents. |
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02:54 | so continent, sea level does rise fall Over 10s to hundreds of millions |
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02:59 | years as a result of what we tectonic used to see, which is |
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03:04 | to rates and magnitudes of sea floor and whether or not there's a lot |
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03:09 | young oceanic crust, but those kind changes probably occur at timescales that are |
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03:15 | slow. And what I'll show you is some, some of the evidence |
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03:20 | much higher frequency sea level change in cretaceous. And you've already seen some |
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03:24 | these examples and sort of here and , but we'll focus on this a |
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03:28 | bit. The other interesting thing that's on is that the, when we |
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03:37 | about Exxon trying to develop a use global sea level curve. I think |
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03:44 | idea was that this would actually almost the geological timescale. The idea is |
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03:49 | sea level is changing faster than And so if you can actually nail |
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03:54 | the timing and patterns of high frequency driven you static change that that gives |
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04:01 | even high resolution As two time zones as stages and uh and periods and |
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04:09 | smaller units versus using traditional bios photography the conventional geological timescale that's developing into |
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04:17 | science of astro chronology, which means the geological record on the basis of |
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04:23 | of these molecular astro astronomical orbital And if you recall when I talked |
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04:29 | the origin and frequency of orbital I mentioned that there were there were |
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04:36 | , and 400,000 year cycles and that's rapid. Okay, auto genic process |
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04:41 | as switching of big delta lobes, the Mississippi occurs over frequencies of maybe |
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04:46 | couple of 1000 years. Small deltas switch even faster. But once we |
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04:51 | into sort of 20 and 100,000 years were sort of into things that are |
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04:55 | what we call allergenic or Alice. click were driven by processes that are |
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05:01 | to the sedimentary basin. Mhm. , in terms of of of used |
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05:08 | see which again means global sea level the greenhouse glaciers are sort of the |
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05:13 | obvious way to take water out of ocean and stick it on the continent |
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05:17 | call sea levels dropped. Okay. , there are other effects. There |
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05:21 | what are called hysteric effects which is when sea water is warmer, it |
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05:26 | a little bit and when seawater is contracts a little bit. So a |
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05:30 | temperature change. The oceans can cause sea level change of about a few |
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05:35 | . Okay, now, down Miller said, well, 15 m |
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05:39 | sea level fall, that will be by 50 m of sea level |
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05:43 | When the glaciers melt, that means could have plus and minus 30 m |
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05:46 | sea level change or zero suitable uh gets taken out of the ocean is |
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05:52 | the continent's withdraws by 15 m that melts and comes back up again |
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05:57 | so so and so so and so . Um hysteric effects sort of plus |
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06:03 | minus maybe five m. So you've 15 m. It can't be stereo |
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06:07 | . The other hypothesis that's been around maybe maybe a decade is the idea |
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06:12 | aquifers, that is groundwater changes can you static sea level changes. And |
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06:19 | idea is that if you get more stored in aquifers, then sea levels |
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06:23 | drop. And if you get less stored in aquifers aquifers than see that |
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06:27 | can rise. Now, if you about that, you know, |
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06:33 | when the earth is dry, you expect less water on land and more |
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06:36 | the oceans. So dry periods might correlated with, with sea level rises |
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06:41 | wet periods might correlate with sea level . Right? And you know, |
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06:46 | then we tend to think, wet periods, warmer, warmer, |
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06:49 | , high sea level, cold and , low sea level. So that's |
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06:53 | of a that's kind of the opposite what you might expect with aquifer used |
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06:56 | see. Um So we've been thinking this activity used to the idea The |
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07:02 | says that if all of the actress the world simultaneously filled and drained, |
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07:06 | could get a c double change up 40 m. However, putting ice |
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07:13 | a content. Just one thing because content gets colder, but you |
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07:18 | with climate, you know, it be warm in one continent dry and |
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07:22 | , it's not clear to me at why aquifers would simultaneously rise and fall |
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07:27 | the same time. You got different and different hemispheres. So my feeling |
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07:32 | it would be harder to get synchronous rises and falls globally versus uh growth |
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07:39 | decay of ice sheets. So although theoretical limit of aquifer used to see |
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07:44 | 40 m, Other people said it's not more more than 5-10 m. |
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07:50 | the theory of adequate profusely is still much a theory. Anyway. The |
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07:58 | thing is Matthew's back and I think we did some of the early work |
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08:04 | on global temperature change suggested that the was completely ice free in the mid |
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08:11 | . So there is that sort of out there that there was no |
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08:14 | No, I see no significant icing planet earth in the mid cretaceous and |
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08:19 | course that then requires you to okay, so if there's no |
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08:23 | How do you get these high frequency Europe? See dollar changes. It's |
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08:27 | gonna be aquifer used to see or effects. But as I've talked |
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08:32 | those are probably probably just not big for the magnitude of changes that we |
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08:37 | in the in the rock record. . Now, another thing that that |
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08:44 | worth considering is that in a passive on the bottom got a hinge |
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08:51 | Okay. And general subsidence is greater the basin. And the hinge line |
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08:55 | moving very much. There's no real to lift that hinge line up. |
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08:59 | in passive margins, it's very easy subside the basin which can cause a |
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09:03 | sea level rise. But at a marketing by definition is passive but there's |
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09:10 | way to lift that lift the sphere . So as a consequence, it's |
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09:13 | difficult to produce a sea level fall a passive margin unless you drop sea |
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09:20 | . That makes sense. You you can you can cause a relative |
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09:23 | level rise by lifting the land Right? But then that that requires |
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09:27 | tectonic lee active basin. So, I think some people protecting academics don't |
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09:33 | is one of the reasons why. did all of their mapping of global |
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09:37 | to see on passive margins is because said they're not tectonic lee active. |
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09:42 | can't lift up. So we see from big sea level drops a couple |
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09:46 | m of sea level drop. There's way you can lift a passive margin |
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09:49 | by 100 m. That would mean a it's a tectonic Lee active |
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09:53 | which it isn't by definition, it's passive margin. Now the problem is |
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09:58 | lot of the, you know, that was sort of the story of |
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10:01 | seismic photography in the development, the sea level curves that came from analysis |
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10:06 | seismic data that Exxon had around the . But I'm just reiterating some of |
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10:12 | lectures I gave I guess last Now john Van Wagner got in the |
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10:18 | and was influenced very much by truck who you work with an Exxon and |
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10:24 | worked on the gallops sandstone in New , which I've done a lot of |
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10:27 | on mentored Van Wagner and got Van said, wait a minute, why |
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10:32 | we take these seismic concepts and apply using well, logs and outcrops. |
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10:38 | of course he was an ep arco production research company and you know, |
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10:42 | being the size of the company. I said sure we'd like you to |
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10:45 | see whether or not you can apply secret strata graphic concepts to more geological |
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10:50 | and what better place to test that liquidations interior seaway. We got all |
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10:54 | beautiful rocks. Right? The problem course is that foreland basins don't work |
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10:58 | same as passive margins, they subside to where the load is. Okay |
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11:05 | area here. The hinge line can up and lift. So unlike a |
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11:09 | margin in a fallen basin, which an active margin, you can get |
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11:13 | . Also, if you erode the away, that decreases the ice static |
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11:18 | and the basement can lift up So foreland basins can kind of yo |
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11:21 | up and down. Gabe. The , of course, is how fast |
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11:25 | happens. And I've talked about the modelers and I mean, Gary carter |
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11:29 | to say, oh, you if you removed a single grain of |
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11:32 | that removes the load and the little will will respond by lifting up. |
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11:37 | a grain of sand isn't much So the little sphere will lift up |
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11:40 | about a 10th of a grain of . So, you know, you |
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11:43 | to remove a lot of load to significant uplift. Right? So when |
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11:47 | see sequence boundary and fallen basins, evidence of sea level drops and valley |
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11:52 | . You have to you have to the question, okay, could could |
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11:56 | of that sea level fall be the of lifting the basin up? Because |
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12:00 | basins could yo yo up and Right. And so, you |
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12:03 | I thought quite carefully about. so what's the rate of which foreland |
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12:07 | subside and lift up? You and how much of the tectonic component |
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12:12 | we ignore or extract when we're trying extract sea level records from foreign |
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12:18 | That's a that's a little bit of of again, this, this is |
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12:21 | , you know, we reviewed a bit about the tectonics of the sequence |
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12:24 | of non marine basins and foreland basins the class in the class. |
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12:29 | So this sort of reviews and, builds on those concepts, but the |
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12:33 | being that a lot of high resolution photography has been done in foreland |
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12:38 | but they of course have a, a different accommodation and tectonic profile versus |
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12:44 | margins. Okay, you've seen this before. So here we are in |
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12:50 | cretaceous interior seaway. The Tyrone Ian the time in which sea levels were |
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12:55 | highest. There was massive sea floor as the atlantic was opening. The |
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13:00 | atlantic little sphere was buoyed up in atmosphere, displacing water onto the |
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13:06 | splitting north America in two. And was combined with periods of very high |
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13:11 | global temperatures. So in general, very warm period with lots of uh |
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13:17 | of high sea level, resulting in flooded continents. So here is a |
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13:24 | cross section across the fallen basin and have a series of uh, we |
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13:29 | the shale to the right, the shale in the more distant parts of |
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13:33 | form of the seaway that becomes a . Those are things like the austin |
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13:37 | here in texas. And of as we go towards the thrust |
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13:42 | we start to start to get these of sandstone that intrude into the Mongo |
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13:47 | and the sandstone that we're going to about this morning is the fare and |
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13:51 | member, which is uh, sticks the tongue into the mongo |
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13:56 | It over lies the shell and it's land by the blue gate shale and |
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14:01 | passes ultimately into conglomerate. Ick It's a middle tyranny in the late |
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14:10 | , late Santoni in age and it's to be a member in terms of |
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14:14 | , photography. It's considered to be member of the mango shale formation. |
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14:20 | word formation is sometimes not used, it can be confusing and again, |
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14:24 | to go back to lecture to, think it was, you know, |
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14:27 | lot of jobs. So it's, the, it's the, you |
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14:30 | it's the magic of shell. It's Austin chalk, you gotta wait a |
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14:34 | . Is that a formation or is is a group? Is it a |
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14:37 | ? You know, and you get little bit losses to like wait a |
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14:39 | . What, what, what, in the hierarchy is this? Is |
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14:43 | myth a strata graphic, you we're talking about? Okay, |
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14:47 | but the macro shell is indeed a and the Faron sandstone is indeed a |
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14:54 | . My opinion should be elevated to formation, but I've never done |
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15:00 | So the fair and sound stone is exposed in central Utah kind of |
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15:09 | the san rafael swell and Call her in the 70s to find it to |
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15:15 | a series of wedges in the Uh, there is the last, |
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15:20 | he called the last Chance Delta that's bit younger. That's exposed, sort |
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15:25 | from kind of around the town of and pinches out before you get to |
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15:30 | . There's a delta that comes from north and south called the vernal |
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15:35 | And then there's this delta that's exposed the Notam Road and around Hank's ville |
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15:42 | that's referred that's referred to as the Delta. These are informal names. |
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15:47 | they're smaller scale features the members. have to get one of these |
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15:50 | I'm going to, I'm going to the note and dealt the last chance |
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15:53 | out as members and elevate the fair a formation, but I haven't done |
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15:58 | yet anyway. In general, the builds in general to the east and |
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16:05 | northeast. So the last chance delta are essentially a dip section. Whereas |
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16:11 | note, um, delta is sort a horseshoe comes down and then it |
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16:15 | of goes east. So it's got much more sort of oval shaped |
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16:21 | So it, it intersects the formation various angles. Jim Garrison attempt to |
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16:27 | of put the, that the Um, and last chance in vernal |
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16:31 | . I don't have the vernal is here. Uh, you may not |
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16:35 | this, but yesterday I showed you of the john Henry member over land |
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16:41 | the, that the uh, what hell's the name of the sandstone tarantula |
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16:47 | ? This is, this was keith PhD work. The last chance is |
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16:52 | little bit younger. The noted was older delta general. The note, |
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16:56 | looks like it might be sort of third order fall of sea level |
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17:01 | The last chance is a bit of back step. Uh, so at |
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17:04 | sort of third order scale, remember have, we have first order to |
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17:07 | all the changes. Those are the sort of wilson cycles that we have |
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17:11 | order changes. Third order of the strata graphic cycles and the 4th and |
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17:15 | order in general, correlate to use to probably glacier you static cycles. |
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17:21 | these members might correlate roughly with kind third order cycles. That third, |
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17:27 | 3rd motorcycles that may have a quasi component. And uh, we do |
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17:35 | some dates associated with these, which us to think about, you |
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17:39 | because we have a pretty good bye graphic framework and we've got bentonite throughout |
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17:44 | units that we've now gone back and dating on. We do have a |
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17:48 | good idea of the amount of time with each of these delta systems and |
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17:53 | relatively short lived, The known adult deposited in about 750,000 years. And |
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18:01 | last chance deposited about a million which gives you a feel for the |
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18:06 | timing of the duration of the deposition these units. So this is work |
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18:13 | by Jim Garrison and his former wife the time, koko Vandenberg. She |
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18:21 | to work at Exxon mobil. He at mobile and they both quit and |
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18:26 | moved out to, he moved out emery Utah and got up every day |
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18:31 | basically measured sections for several years and together this cross section of the last |
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18:35 | delta each the black dots on the is one of his measured sections. |
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18:41 | . And so if you recall, very last thing I showed yesterday was |
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18:49 | Patterson's revised work on the book cliffs on hundreds of measures sections and Simon's |
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18:55 | section looks not dissimilar to Jim's cross . So it sort of tells you |
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19:00 | , you know, and you'll struggle this. You know, when when |
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19:02 | look at your cross sections, they're look simpler than these because you have |
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19:07 | data. Right? So we'll give an idea of how of how difficult |
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19:11 | is to get all the details when have sparse data and how much you |
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19:15 | in the subsurface world anyway. And is a simplified cross section of a |
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19:21 | more detailed correlation panel that Jim Garrison together. But broadly speaking, he |
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19:27 | of has a rim of shore faces deltas and yellow. Uh these correlate |
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19:35 | worth with with a wedge of non faces that consists of floodplain, mostly |
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19:41 | , mud stones and find sand stones green coals and black and then a |
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19:47 | of channels, channel belts and sized showing the orange colors. This is |
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19:52 | country and the Faron is mined for coal. In addition that coal produces |
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19:58 | , there's coal bed methane as well gas. Gas fields associated with the |
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20:02 | and sandstone. So it is it a it is rich in fossil |
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20:07 | One thing it doesn't have is Okay, the other thing you may |
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20:11 | , if you just look at it , what can you tell me about |
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20:17 | distribution of the sizes of channels or belts in this cross section? |
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20:46 | Brain freeze. Okay, I'm Right, right. But I think |
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21:21 | think it does look like that cole kind of quite widespread. The channels |
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21:25 | of in between the coals. It looks like the channels are kind |
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21:28 | avoiding. It looks like you've either Kohli layers or channel areas. Sometimes |
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21:33 | channels cut the calls out, they seem to be quite the levels of |
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21:37 | cold, suggesting the channels are maybe graphically different in their origin from the |
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21:42 | . Right. I'm going to I'm to question you on one thing you |
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21:47 | pointed out. Well, you said about channels distantly versus in the sort |
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21:53 | the green area. Right. McDonough that there were less channels distantly than |
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22:00 | the green area. Do you agree that? I don't agree with |
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22:05 | I don't that wider. So are channels here? Let's count it. |
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22:25 | . 1, 34567, 8, , 10, 11, 12, |
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22:29 | , 14, 15, 16, , 16, 21 27, |
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22:34 | 25, 26, 26 - 5 channels here. That's not fair. |
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22:44 | . I think there's actually more chance about there smaller right now. Some |
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22:52 | them are actually still on his Right? So now we're seeing evidence |
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22:56 | single story channels with little amount amalgamation much bigger channels and sometimes, |
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23:03 | you know, one of these channels here in the first shadow right |
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23:06 | these distribution channels are just rivers. remember, I talked about the fact |
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23:12 | in plastic wedges, you know, , you know, the channels get |
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23:16 | as you go downstream because it become , right? And you may get |
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23:20 | moisture channels landlord. So we are in general, I think it's very |
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23:25 | . You see six solid channels on periphery of the wedge, bigger and |
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23:31 | motivated challenges in the part of the , right? That's probably representing something |
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23:37 | do with that trump versus distributor channels I talked about, right, whether |
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23:42 | not an interpretation channel series a different . Do uh, they have been |
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23:48 | so well for the last chance, my graduate students are well documented within |
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23:52 | building, which has a lot of . So, you know, you |
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23:55 | start to look at sort of the of channels of channels, which channel |
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24:00 | versus these big things. It might valleys, you can sort of see |
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24:04 | , you know, their values There's no valleys out here. |
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24:08 | But they never got this far, sort of makes sense, Right? |
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24:11 | , you know, some gumdrops, drops and the public's almost and |
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24:15 | but the valley stopped before the low alone is deposited. Right? Like |
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24:20 | saw in some of the other examples showed yesterday. Does that make |
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24:30 | So here's an example of one of and Vandenberg's more detailed panels. The |
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24:38 | lines represent their measured sections. And then these lines represent their |
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24:44 | And you can see they've got multistory , uh local, sometimes they have |
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24:49 | plugs. Right? So the, mud plugs kind of give you an |
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24:53 | maybe what the channel is. They have a lot of lateral accretion. |
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24:57 | you should have got the feeling for scale of a lateral accretion set. |
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25:01 | then in some of these non marine , they have relatively small channels. |
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25:05 | there's a channel belt that's basically one thick and the mud plug is almost |
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25:09 | same thickness as the channel belt. that right down here and then we've |
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25:15 | these single story, a single lateral set. So sometimes we've got single |
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25:20 | channels and sometimes we have four or vertically stacked stories and jim used that |
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25:26 | kind of distinguish units that he thought sequences or, you know, sequence |
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25:31 | versus just single single channels. And can see, you know, sometimes |
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25:36 | got to what looks like a multi sandstone, then you get a bunch |
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25:39 | single story, the multi stories. there may be some cycling of single |
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25:44 | multi story channels. So this is most language panel. This is the |
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25:52 | panel. Again, you can see , we've got a a single channel |
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25:56 | that's actually multistory. It's over lined a call. It's underlined by a |
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26:01 | fill. And if you can trace channel to this mouth bar. |
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26:06 | So the nice thing about the and you say, well that channel |
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26:09 | that delta. So you can sort think about the scale of the delta |
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26:12 | the channel that feeds it. So can link specific channels to a specific |
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26:18 | that it feeds. There's a few in the last chance where you get |
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26:23 | views through the channels. So this a vertical line that represents a strike |
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26:28 | comes into and out of the page there's this nice channel in the middle |
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26:33 | the outcrop has been named the kokopelli . And here's a close up of |
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26:38 | geology of that channel. So the has this sort of shape. |
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26:50 | and a lot of these channels have channel and what we call wings. |
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26:56 | wings would be the crevasse splay, ? What you can see is that |
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26:59 | channel is migrating in that direction. it's also lifting up just a little |
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27:03 | , see that. And so what end up is with a channel belt |
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27:10 | that's about the thickness of the Okay. Which is maybe 10 |
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27:15 | And the thickness of the channel belt maybe 12 or 13 m. So |
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27:19 | maybe a few meters. The channel a little bit thicker than the channel |
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27:23 | it's a grading just a little Okay, so that's an example of |
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27:27 | channel. It's migrating and every flood lifting itself up a little bit. |
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27:32 | , this is very common in river that when they flood, they built |
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27:36 | levee up and the channel actually auto lift itself up. This is actually |
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27:42 | it could be lifting up because it's the back water. So maybe a |
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27:45 | bit of sea level is talking it's lifting up. But once the |
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27:48 | becomes elevated or super elevated, you , if the top of the channel |
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27:53 | a little bit at the top of water in the channel is higher than |
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27:56 | old floodplain, then that channel will a temp propensity for Dulcich. So |
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28:02 | jim didn't talk about the controls of . Many people have documented this process |
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28:07 | a channel lifting itself up as it as a mechanism to cause and initiate |
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28:14 | avulsion of a channel. This is good example of how a single story |
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28:18 | migrates and can produce a slightly multistory certainly multilateral channel belt, multilateral because |
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28:26 | the channel belt is significantly wider than channel that formed it multi story because |
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28:32 | a little bit thicker than one story down. There's this thing called the |
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28:40 | Line channel and that's, that's the Line channel there and that feeds that |
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28:49 | bar. And there's been some debate to whether this is an incised valley |
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28:54 | a distributor channel. Let's look at a little bit. So what's interesting |
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28:59 | is what it looks like an So, you know, the air |
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29:02 | is not vertically exaggerated, but you see what looks like a wing |
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29:08 | Then it kind of cuts down, up and then it's got a wing |
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29:13 | the other side. Okay, so what this thing looks like. |
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29:19 | when I first visited this out this and the, I guess in the |
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29:24 | 90s, you know, we we just call this a distributor channel |
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29:28 | moved on. Right. However, more I looked and I said, |
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29:31 | it's kind of interesting. It's actually eight stories and stories 1-5 look like |
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29:39 | incised 7, 8 looks like they're grading. So this looks like a |
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29:46 | cut a fairly deep hole. Now a five m scale here. So |
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29:51 | incision is about, I think it's 30 m. The actual thickness of |
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29:57 | story is maybe about 5-6 m. , We're pretty close to the shore |
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30:03 | , only five km, but this looks like it's sizing. So some |
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30:08 | us think that this may be evidence this is some sort of incised |
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30:12 | right? Having said that it's not wide. Like look at the lateral |
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30:15 | here, this thing is migrating very . What is this thing? |
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30:24 | Oh my goodness. I think I what it is. This is probably |
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30:30 | backwater scour. Remember when I said the river that gets, when it |
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30:34 | close to the shore line? And if the river is in |
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30:38 | it digs down and cuts a little . I bet you dollars to |
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30:42 | That's what that's what this thing And you know, when I realized |
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30:50 | , so I've interpreted things in size . The other hypothesis is this |
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30:55 | remember I talked about when the, the river's flood, the lower back |
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30:59 | couldn't size a bit more deeply. when I figured that out. I |
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31:09 | told you the story. Right, hmm. No, I figured out |
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31:21 | , right now I'm serious. I went like, wait a minute. |
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31:26 | been confused by this for 20 I bet that's a backwater scour Because |
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31:33 | lower one is only 1.7 km of shorelines. That's, that's pretty |
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31:39 | Okay. Anyway, so the interesting this this the the lack of the |
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31:46 | of lateral migration tells what this thing . This thing was very short |
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31:49 | Right? So it looks like it's a scarab that's that's eight stories |
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31:53 | Now not all the stories are fully , but it's a short lived over |
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31:58 | size system and a dust seemed to into a couple of power sequences |
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32:03 | Okay, here is another small Faron and this is also quite close to |
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32:11 | shore line. It cuts into three sequences. You can see the lateral |
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32:16 | sets. Okay. And there's five stacked stories. The depth of the |
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32:23 | is about 27 m. The depth channels is about six m. So |
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32:27 | thing is cutting about three or four depths deep. But once again it's |
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32:32 | narrow, it's only about 100 m . Right? So it's quite a |
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32:36 | , probably relatively short lived system And so I stripped off all the |
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32:43 | and then the blue represents the size the channel versus the largest scale scarab |
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32:49 | it cut. Once again, I whether this thing possibly could be a |
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32:55 | scour. I've got to think about some more. Anyway. Yeah. |
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33:01 | I've worked on the, I started on the fair and First started looking |
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33:05 | it when I joined Arco in And then uh I worked around it |
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33:12 | I, when I worked for the of Economic Geology in 97, they |
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33:16 | just finished a big project and when I took up my professorship at Ut |
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33:21 | , we started working on, we doing work on the last chance Delta |
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33:26 | went to U. Of H. started working on the Farrah Notam Delta |
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33:30 | earnest. And that work began about . And uh since and of course |
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33:38 | Wally and usually the 1st 1st 2 students at the University of Houston right |
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33:45 | And they started their phds in about And we got finished in 2009 and |
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33:52 | year later. And you can look the list of all my PhD students |
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33:59 | and it keeps on going. And when I went to McMaster, these |
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34:04 | McMaster students, these guys, all McMaster students that the final projects and |
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34:12 | more. So I got up to students that worked on the ferret. |
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34:17 | , now there's two ways you can a project, you can do what |
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34:21 | Patterson did. Simon teaches at brand University has no graduate program only |
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34:28 | So Simon just goes out every year has been going out for 30 years |
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34:31 | himself Made with the old undergraduate, collecting data. My approach was to |
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34:36 | 33 students out over Well since 2005 we nailed it that way. |
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34:42 | Either way we got a we got heck of a project. The trick |
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34:46 | having 33 students says you've got to a lot of quality control, |
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34:49 | Because they're all different and you've got make sure that in the end they |
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34:52 | collect this day that's compatible with each . And so to do a lot |
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34:56 | work to kind of make sure that , so there's a lot of mentoring |
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34:59 | on here, right? You you got to spend time with all |
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35:01 | students and make sure that you're confident they know what they're doing at any |
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35:07 | . So, and, and this work was funded by A consortium |
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35:12 | one point. I had 10 companies me at the University of Houston. |
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35:16 | was kind of the glory days. consortium fee was I think 25-$35,000 a |
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35:23 | . So I was pulling in, , about a quarter of $350,000 a |
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35:28 | . And that was paying for a of students right that we, we |
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35:32 | a good time, You know, to Utah and have a few |
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35:36 | go do fieldwork. Yeah. Anyway went to the house and we found |
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35:40 | guy in shanksville named Taco Van Leprechaun is dutch. He lives in Canada |
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35:46 | he does his uh, he's a climber but he only slot slot climbs |
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35:51 | the, in the early spring and fall of winter is never there in |
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35:55 | summers. Of course we can't do work any other time this summer because |
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35:59 | students are tang, even though it's there. And so, and he |
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36:02 | always happy to have his rent this , he had a five bedroom house |
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36:06 | a swamp or swamp air conditioner, couple of showers. It was |
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36:14 | Yeah, he had two bathrooms, , that was great, you |
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36:18 | And uh, and hacks ville was maybe half an hour drive from these |
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36:22 | . So yeah, we we had good time of it from, so |
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36:27 | work in 2005. 1st, students 2009 and uh, and I've still |
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36:35 | a couple of students working on the and even as we speak, All |
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36:39 | , their crops are amazing. You , the reason we picked these air |
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36:42 | is there's not much vegetation and so can see the geology continuously exposed for |
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36:47 | far as the eye can see. so the only limitation is just sampling |
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36:50 | with enough frequency. They don't miss outs. Right? That's basically |
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36:54 | Right. And even if you do pinch outs, you know, sometimes |
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36:58 | can, you can correlate them with or just walk the sand stones out |
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37:03 | between your measured sections. Thanks. here's an example of the delta it |
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37:10 | . You can see there are a of pair of sequences here. There's |
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37:13 | Big one you can probably see, a graduate student up there. There's |
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37:20 | graduate student there, we do a of work on ropes. So we |
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37:23 | a rope on the cliff and then the geology that way. Okay. |
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37:28 | there's a DJ vu repelling down a and here is a couple of there's |
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37:33 | Parco and Ryan Kruger measuring the right? So these J staff abby |
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37:38 | and then and then basically work our up the outcrop or just use a |
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37:44 | tape hanging on a rope. Just measure that the rocks vertically. |
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37:49 | there's a photograph of the, of rocks above and then on the |
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37:54 | there's there's a photograph of the rocks the various sequence boundaries, flooding |
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38:00 | Ben, tonight's and other surfaces that students, e j ju who did |
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38:05 | big dip profile, uh, sorted the fair and sandstone. There it |
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38:14 | Lysistrata, graphically, there's the base it over lies a pretty thick unit |
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38:19 | shales. Okay, that's the tonic . That's an interesting unit in its |
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38:25 | right. You can see some little layers in the shale. Okay, |
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38:31 | see them there. Those are the . So, the volcanic ash |
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38:36 | Okay, those are critical for providing lower data. Critical. And you |
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38:42 | also see there's all sorts of color in these shales. Many years |
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38:47 | I managed to get another one of grad students, Zhang lei did his |
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38:55 | on these shales with juergen Schieber indiana he logged the entire shale from the |
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39:01 | of Dakota, all that to the , did a great project on that |
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39:05 | the tanning shells. I see that is here so welcome. We're kind |
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39:11 | just getting started in this lecture. just doing a bit of sort of |
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39:14 | . Haven't missed too much. So just keep going if you have |
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39:20 | just raise your hand. Let me . She also Okay, so there's |
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39:26 | ahmed and she's walking out this bed . You can see it's got a |
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39:30 | distinctive weathering popcorn weathering. Don't drive event tonight when it rains. It's |
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39:38 | driving on Greece anyway. And they very distinctive, very soft in the |
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39:44 | . They kind of have this light to sort of greenish color and of |
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39:48 | they are rich in, in, , in crystals. Both zircons insanity |
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39:53 | which the type of plastic plays. indeed have extracted those and sent them |
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39:57 | to get dates, dates analyzed. the bentonite provide both critical chrono metric |
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40:06 | as well as representing strata graphic data those are highlighted with the pink |
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40:12 | Okay. Um, And there's the section that, that TJ put together |
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40:19 | and we've actually revised that a little , pardon me. Where is |
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40:37 | The calls? Uh, so this is the, this is the |
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40:42 | and delta. There's a, there a little coal mine here that's |
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40:45 | Yeah. We visit that number of and I visited some of the fair |
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40:49 | coal coal mines. Yes. Uh, they're mostly cold. They're |
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40:53 | digging kind of close to the Right? Yes. The mines aren't |
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40:57 | deep. Most of the calls pretty to the surface. And so here's |
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41:02 | measured sections and here's the same cross with the measured sections taken off. |
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41:06 | Uj identified 43 pair sequences, 18 sequence sets, six sequences. And |
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41:12 | show very well defined paris. You stack and patterns that define the various |
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41:18 | . Tracks. Okay. And I through this last class, you've got |
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41:23 | of paris sequences. You know, is faces little sort of delta front |
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41:30 | pro delta transition. There is that in going from 15 - 14. |
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41:37 | so that that represents a pretty major . Then that faces kind of starts |
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41:42 | lift up so you can see it's into a grading. Then it starts |
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41:47 | migrate landward. So that's the retro . Then it lifts up aggregation, |
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41:52 | it starts to pro grade two Then it drops or degrades, then |
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41:56 | drops again, then it pro grades it drops again. And so you |
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42:00 | just you can you can pick any contact you want and track it throughout |
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42:04 | cross section. Right? And whether track the shore line or the delta |
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42:10 | to pro delta transition, Take a breath here, you know the pro |
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42:16 | . The delta front of pro delta could shift a bit seaward if you |
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42:20 | have a little bit of excess sediment . Right? So some of these |
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42:24 | can be just caused by a little of local noise and sediment supply. |
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42:29 | something like a physical drop of prophecies only produce by either uplift or sea |
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42:33 | drop. Right? So some shifts faces can only be controlled by sea |
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42:38 | drops and sorry, by sea level and others can be controlled by changes |
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42:45 | sediment supply. So this boundary I'm is not the shore line and the |
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42:52 | can also be, you know, you crank up sediment supply, the |
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42:55 | will pro grade CRT. Another forum said that, you know, all |
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43:00 | considered, you know, you big jumps probably represent sea level change |
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43:07 | than just a bit more sediment or bit less sediment particularly drops. And |
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43:14 | , you know, we're basically applying idea of of of of stacking |
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43:19 | We've got various terms are the same . We can talk about the client |
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43:23 | trajectory, the shore line, accommodation successions, para sequence stacking |
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43:30 | they all basically mean the same Right? Just slightly different words. |
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43:35 | advantage of using the word accommodation, , it gets you away from this |
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43:39 | para sequence, which sort of implies scale. Okay. And and Jack |
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43:46 | and vito bro said, well wait minute. You know, in the |
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43:49 | of a clone, we can't see upward coarsening paris sequence. We can't |
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43:52 | beds and bed sets. So we really use the term para sequence, |
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43:57 | we can see similar project. We see similar patterns of chloroform uh |
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44:04 | So why don't we develop a terminology a bit more generic and a bit |
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44:07 | scaled at that? Okay. And that's why they came up with this |
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44:11 | terminology. I can't like it. everybody does, but there you |
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44:15 | Right. And furthermore, they pointed that that these that these these different |
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44:24 | of stacking patterns reflect both magnitudes and of change of the accommodation to the |
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44:32 | supply. So anytime you've got pro settlement, supply must outstrip accommodation, |
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44:38 | means that the A. S. must be less than one. |
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44:43 | If it becomes negative then you get . If it's positive but segment supplies |
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44:48 | , then you'll get probation. And course when the accommodation is greater than |
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44:52 | up to supply, that's the condition you get back stepping or retro gradation |
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44:57 | transgression. Okay. And so on so forth. And then so that's |
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45:04 | sort of the those are the that simple geometric diagrams that illustrate the concept |
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45:09 | accommodation successions. And then here is designation of the accommodation successions in the |
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45:16 | based on the analysis, the stack patterns of that cross section. |
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45:21 | And I went through all this last . Okay, so I won't review |
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45:25 | again in in in detail. Um you know, if this is not |
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45:31 | perfectly dip components. So there is uncertainty in the in the trajectory perhaps |
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45:36 | of some strike, uh strike lateral of deltas. Good to be a |
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45:41 | bit careful, but and then now other thing we've done, which I |
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45:47 | should put that all in here is new work that we've done is we've |
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45:50 | this cross six and we've back stripped . So what we've done is we've |
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45:54 | assumptions about the tectonic subsidence, the of substance. And we stripped all |
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45:59 | out to generate a use static sea curve. That's brand new work. |
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46:04 | put it that paper this week. . And so we're sort of doing |
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46:09 | lot of work on the use static in these outcrops. Yeah, well |
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46:19 | did back when I was here, have a church rob Stewart took a |
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46:25 | team out, we collected seismic on outcrop. I spent a lot of |
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46:31 | to take the team out there. data weren't great. He's got that |
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46:39 | you can talk to rob Stewart and where is that fair and seismic |
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46:43 | Yes. See. Yeah. Yeah. The problem is always its |
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46:51 | seismic. You've got statics problems. got resolution difficulties. It is |
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46:57 | right, right at the surface. the short answer is yes. We've |
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47:01 | we also have sex like that of different delta that arco collected and it |
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47:05 | very poor quality data. So there go. And of course we put |
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47:12 | wheeler diagrams. We do have, , this is terrible. I do |
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47:23 | real diagrams with the absolute dates. didn't show those to you. Those |
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47:27 | are in in papers, they're not young anymore. But but anyway, |
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47:33 | got wheeler diagrams, we've got a sea level curve. We now have |
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47:37 | use static C double curve with the taken out and it shows unequivocal evidence |
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47:44 | 100,000 to 40,000 years to 20,000 years . So we feel pretty confident that |
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47:50 | are melancholic cycles. And that's that's well demonstrated by by the by the |
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47:57 | by the number of the number of and sequences that we see. We've |
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48:02 | about six sequences in seven and 50,000 . So that's roughly, you |
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48:07 | Divide by 750 x six. You 120,000 possibly. You've missed a |
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48:12 | There's someone conformity. So now you're that kind of 100,000 year realm for |
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48:16 | sequences. And so it looks like probably the short eccentricity cycles. |
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48:24 | And then we talked some about uh, the non marine sequence |
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48:28 | Sorry about the rap here. I have fixed that. And we went |
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48:31 | that in some detail yesterday and here's strike section. So it sort of |
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48:39 | around the corner here. So this section is oblique dip. Bc is |
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48:43 | , strike the delta sort of program or less in that direction. So |
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48:50 | not. Neither of them are perfect sections, but certainly this section has |
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48:54 | much better developed climate forms. So want to talk a little about this |
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49:01 | valley since we are sort of on theme of non marine faces. And |
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49:08 | was the main PhD student, did lot of work on this sized |
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49:12 | Uh Apoula did a big PhD on , as did David Kynaston, who |
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49:18 | up, has been a series of students that did some smaller projects. |
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49:22 | there's the regional paler currents. This based on 210 pale current measurements and |
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49:29 | that the valleys of programming sort of northeast is a rough direction and there's |
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49:38 | variability in there. So here's what outcrops look like. Um Here you've |
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49:46 | one marine power sequence and flooding then you have another one, but |
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49:52 | second one is cut by valleys and noticed that there is a white valley |
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49:58 | , then there's a sandy laminated valley and then there's the youngest valley. |
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50:03 | you notice that this has beds that kind of dipping from left to |
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50:08 | And on lapping this Valley three which is a big stack of Sandy |
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50:13 | beds. And then the youngest valley laterally creating in the opposite direction to |
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50:18 | . two and V. One, . Two and muddier. And |
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50:21 | Three is a bit sandy in this , although the faces and feel very |
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50:27 | , but it's not uncommon that we three amalgamated cuts. He also knows |
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50:32 | V two cuts out V three. , we see evidence some of the |
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50:37 | valleys are deeper than the older You get the idea that there's terracing |
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50:42 | on. Right. And so this one of the world's first projects where |
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|
50:45 | could really convince myself that we were evidence of terrorist deposits in a compound |
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|
50:51 | film. Here is another example, of my favorite photographs of all |
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|
50:59 | So what you see with the dashed line is a big channel form |
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51:05 | See that the channel foreign feature. is that above it there is a |
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51:13 | plain, coal rich mud stone and there's a sandstone here. And with |
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|
51:18 | eye of faith, I think you see well developed lateral accretion. See |
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51:22 | ? So here we've got a Okay, there is the channel and |
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51:30 | is, there is it's it's channel and it kind of comes up to |
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51:34 | zero line here. And so we a point bar overlying a floodplain that's |
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51:44 | within a larger erosion all feature. ? So here, you can clearly |
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51:49 | there is the largest scale valley and a smaller scale river and floodplain inside |
|
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51:54 | valley. Right. And we we both Ben Hilton and David Kynaston mapped |
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52:02 | , that you can actually map this valley floor locally and you can see |
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52:07 | of tributary valley fills coming in. quite an interesting system. Now, |
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52:13 | is the base of That would be . three And this is v. |
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52:21 | . Okay. And then Valley one actually on top of a bit |
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52:27 | So we see the three terraces in slide and we can see the three |
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52:30 | and these literally This outcrop is maybe m away from that one that's on |
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52:35 | side of the valley and then that's the other side of the valley. |
|
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52:40 | you stand at this area where the comes up, that in the |
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52:44 | that's the inter flu, you see examples of, of roots sticking |
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52:48 | So that's, that's the air that high dry. The water table was |
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52:52 | and the roots dug down to get the water. Eventually seen an erosion |
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52:56 | into coles. Right? But these that are digging down in the sand |
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53:00 | get to the water below, That's time of non call. Right? |
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53:04 | the relatively dry time. So the of, we see evidence of water |
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53:08 | water tables associate with these inter We also see lots of evidence for |
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53:19 | much more muddier floodplain sediments. We've sandy caress plays with Kohli floodplains and |
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53:26 | green mud stones with all sorts of slicking sides indicative of paleo Sauls. |
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53:34 | And here's what those soils look Again, they're filled with beautiful route |
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53:39 | and here's an example where there's actually hey bush, there's the trunk of |
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53:45 | bush and then you can actually see twigs and branches coming off on the |
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53:49 | of the bushes, sits, stood a paris flight buried the bush with |
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53:56 | and the bush is still preserved in Uh and it's been there for 90 |
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54:01 | years. Pretty amazing. We see of tear apart or dinosaur footprints. |
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54:10 | the toes. This is the fossil I helped to find which is the |
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54:15 | vertebral column of this parasaurolophus. So see evidence of dinosaurs, both footprints |
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54:25 | bones in these outcrops. Again, this to be a non marine |
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54:29 | Right? You got trees and sit . You got dinosaurs walking around. |
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54:34 | what more evidence could you want This is normal. Here's another example |
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54:38 | , about a maybe a kilometer away the previous outcrops, same valley |
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54:44 | And you can see beautiful upward coarsening sequence. Here's the next one And |
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54:51 | next one is it wrote it into the incised Valley. Okay, if |
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54:57 | look carefully at the top of the valley, there's a beautiful laterally creating |
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55:02 | bar and if we draw the channel can see it's much smaller than the |
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55:07 | of the sand boarding. So once we see evidence of a unequivocally multistory |
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55:12 | bottles. If you look at the of the youngest channel belt and we |
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55:17 | of draw that thickness. We see the the the the valley fill is |
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55:21 | least three full stories thick. of course we can trace the marches |
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55:26 | valley regionally until we get to the where it actually comes up to the |
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55:32 | flu. So we know that the relief on that red surface regionally is |
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55:37 | 27-30 m. And the depth of biggest distributor or Meandering channel we've seen |
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55:46 | maybe 5-6 m. And that would be the towel wag depth. So |
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55:51 | main bank, full depth is probably m. Right? So we've got |
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55:56 | 3-4 m channel Mean Bank, full . That's cutting a 27 m deep |
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56:02 | . So again, unequivocal evidence for valleys. We've done a lot of |
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56:07 | on the betting diagrams. So again white arrows point to the base of |
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56:13 | large valley. The valley is is km wide, 40 kilometers wide. |
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56:24 | what what does the width of the correlate most with? No, well |
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56:35 | maybe ask the question differently. What's main control on the width of the |
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56:41 | ? We talked about the things that scales of values. What nope, |
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56:47 | would control the discharge. Obviously the of the river has some control. |
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56:57 | is this is the one that students the most and again in the context |
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57:03 | the fairyland talked about, we've seen very small valleys And now we've got |
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57:07 | of those 40 km wide where some the other Valleys 100 m wide. |
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57:13 | that's that's two orders of management That has nothing do with tectonics. |
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57:19 | are you static values. What does take? No, it's not subsidence |
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57:29 | would cause the valley to a What's the main control on the, |
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57:45 | width of the valley? So the is doing its work. Right. |
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57:58 | would allow river to do more Very short. This stuff is all |
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58:12 | soft. What controls the ability of river to do anything stuck in the |
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58:47 | back there? And one of yesterday's . But these are small rivers, |
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59:09 | ? 4-7 m deep. How on does a 47 m deep river produce |
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59:15 | 40 kilometer wide incision for me. could one flood event produce a 40 |
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59:26 | wide Valley and 47 m was gonna flood the valley and finish it. |
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59:41 | , appreciate so again, right. okay, but it literally migrates because |
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59:49 | has enough. I'm looking for one . All right, nope. Assume |
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60:01 | those are all constant. But why, why is the colorado? |
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60:11 | is the colorado colorado river cut the Canyon. It's not that big. |
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60:16 | river. What allowed the colorado river cut a mile deep canyon? |
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60:25 | it's not the next point. The Canyon is not really a knick point |
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60:31 | feature. The entire colorado plateau has uplifted. So what's the main control |
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60:39 | why the Grand Canyon is so doesn't do with topography. That's |
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60:49 | Right. It's difficult to row and it's bedrock. You guys are gonna |
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60:57 | yourself when I give you the When did when did the colorado River |
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61:09 | cutting? That's that's a hint, me. Okay, there is some |
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61:30 | that was that it started the So how many years is that? |
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61:37 | still there today. Time. Have you guys ever read Lord of |
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61:42 | No the Hobbit where he's having the with God about the riddles. It's |
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61:48 | eats all cuts, all erodes And he's he he asked for more |
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61:54 | . But that's the answer. Don't forget about. But this is |
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61:57 | whole part of this talk is to to give you feeling for how much |
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62:00 | it takes to form things, 40 km wide valleys and small rivers |
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62:06 | only be cut if there's a lot time to do it. Right. |
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62:09 | we know that this is a much lived. So in the note |
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62:13 | the low stand was much longer lived it was in the last chance. |
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62:21 | . Mhm. Now there is some on the betting diagram of bidirectional down |
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62:26 | indicating that there were braided rivers. there is some notion that incised valleys |
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62:34 | start being braided because if there nick generated, What does the nick point |
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62:47 | ? And what what what favorite brady is favored by an increase in just |
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62:56 | so. Right. So if you an increase in slope, you tend |
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62:59 | produce braided rivers. Right? So not surprising. So in that sense |
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63:04 | don't want to be over critical of idea that that the falling stage and |
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63:08 | rivers can be braided. Who's commonly represents an increase in slope. And |
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63:13 | you increase the slope, murders will to be more likely be braided. |
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63:26 | at the base of this valley, see these mud stone rip ups. |
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63:31 | little white dots represent pebbles. So see coarse grained lag as well as |
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63:36 | grained material Cabot carried by the Here's an example of some of the |
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63:42 | attic alluvial faces. So we've got grade uh pebbles in a cross bedded |
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63:53 | . There's an example of small scale bedding with a hammer for scale. |
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63:57 | the cross bedding is dipping in the direction and as we go into the |
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64:02 | parts of the valley fills. Sometimes see these little vertical trace fossils. |
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64:08 | some of these mud stones were getting marine donna, Flagg glitz and marine |
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64:14 | , adults. So we're seeing some water and marine influence. Sometimes we |
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64:20 | good evidence of double mud drapes. one there maybe maybe another one there |
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64:28 | these double mud rapes are all these mud rapes are pretty typical of, |
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64:32 | , of tidal influence. And then is one of my grad students next |
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64:38 | a nice pinch out on channel, can see the lateral accretion in that |
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64:43 | going into a cut bank. Here's example of a laterally creating channel. |
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64:50 | one is over land by coal. interesting the coal is very difficult to |
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64:54 | . So in this case the channel migrates like gangbusters over an old coal |
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64:59 | or probably no pete. And then much younger channel occupies the area that |
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65:05 | older channel used to be and eventually the older channel out and even gets |
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65:10 | and cuts out that hole. And here's an example of laminated mud |
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65:15 | . That's a floodplain and there's a growing in it. Probably some sort |
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65:19 | mangrove and then that was the top the flood. That was the top |
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65:22 | the floodplain lake and the rest of tree has been oxidized away. |
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65:31 | We're sort of at 65 minutes. think we'll take a little Break. |
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65:35 | I've got 90 slides in this we're almost at 50. We're about |
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65:39 | through. So take a break, a 15 minute break. What time |
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65:46 | it? 10 15? So Start at 10 at 10:30. Does that |
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65:51 | good? No, and I hope I want all my little, my |
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66:06 | stories, you know, kind of trying to make it a bit more |
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66:11 | . Not that geology is not Anyway, so what was interesting |
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66:15 | you know, I started this it's sort of close to the beginning |
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66:21 | telling you how many students have had work the area, right. And |
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66:26 | know, I was looking at google of this area for years and I |
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66:32 | realized what I was looking at. I was looking at this map and |
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66:35 | said, wait a minute. These meanders. Girls look at them, |
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66:42 | another one here and there's probably an channel here. And although it's not |
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66:52 | , this is an outcrop, the cliff here. And you go in |
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66:56 | and you can see that the margin this channel is right there, see |
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67:00 | pinching out perfectly. So um and can see that there is, you |
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67:06 | , this kind of a meander belt . There's a channel coming through |
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67:12 | There's another channel coming through here. that's some sort of shoot channel cuts |
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67:19 | the meander. So we began to that we've got exposed views of these |
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67:25 | meander belts, right? We get feeling for the, you know, |
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67:29 | width of maybe a passive channel Phil so on and so forth. And |
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67:33 | can see some sandy bars here in channels as it kind of migrates in |
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67:39 | direction. And Chen yang wu did over this outcrop with his Brunton and |
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67:48 | measured all the paley currents. So of these triangles points in the direction |
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67:53 | flow and it's beautiful. It just around exactly like you'd expect. So |
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67:58 | can see how the currents are changing plan view. And of course here |
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68:01 | an example of these ribs and furrows that point in the flow direction and |
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68:09 | more examples here you can kind of . So you can walk around these |
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68:15 | and get all these paley current measurements we can sort of reconstruct the flow |
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68:19 | if you like. And then this grain size. And so you can |
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68:25 | that there's courses grains on the outer of the channel where its deepest kind |
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68:32 | makes sense. And then we see uh we also see evidence that that's |
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68:37 | bit coarse grained upstream and it's a finer grained downstream. So we can |
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68:41 | downstream finding finding the point bar as as the finding from the inner as |
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68:45 | as core spinning with finer grains on interbank and coarser grains on the outer |
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68:50 | . So it allows us to mount green sizes in plan view. And |
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68:57 | is useful information. You don't usually this kind of these kind of outcrops |
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69:01 | ? And this gives you feeling for for the changes in grain size, |
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69:05 | of course ultimately reflect changes in process credibility and would would would speak to |
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69:10 | this point bar would produce oil and wasn't buried in full of hydrocarbons channing |
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69:18 | kind of did a little reconstruction of history of the development. So it |
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69:21 | off as a relatively straight channel becomes little bit more sinuous through time reaching |
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69:27 | maximum velocity and eventually the channel re this whole position and these these this |
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69:35 | channel gets plugged up of course, you've got us, that's kind of |
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69:40 | final version with his little plugged up . And so of course, with |
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69:46 | our crops like these, you can a pretty good idea of the width |
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69:49 | the river versus the scale of the belt. We've got good information, |
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69:54 | outcrops that give us information on the the channel and as I said, |
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69:57 | have this this particular channel is well in raise it again. Yeah, |
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70:10 | . Down here, this is where channel is well exposed. We're looking |
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70:13 | this particular shower belt in the subsequent . Yeah, the outcrop belt is |
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70:25 | of in here. All right. so we have an idea of what |
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70:33 | depth of the channel is. And , here's our measured sections where we |
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70:37 | the base of a channel, finds to ripples, base of a channel |
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70:41 | beds going up to the ripples. the ripple faces would represent the upper |
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70:47 | of the channel. The doom scale beds would represent the main main parts |
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70:51 | the bars. And so we've got pretty good idea of of what they're |
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70:56 | the thickness of a full channel Phil okay. And then this is the |
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71:01 | form phase diagram. Bill Dupree probably about that. And so you can |
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71:06 | that for. And so we've got depth on the vertical axis, we've |
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71:11 | velocity on the horizontal axis. And we've got the various bed forms that |
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71:17 | stable at any given combination of depth velocity. And so in the Faron |
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71:23 | observe Doom scale cross beds. But observation of all these cross beds requires |
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71:29 | to be the stable bed form, know, from the base of the |
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71:32 | , all the way up to the at which the flow slowed down, |
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71:35 | it finally slowed down into the ripple . That indicates waning flow. |
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71:41 | And so if you want to understand maximum velocity associated with migration of these |
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71:46 | , right, If it got too , it would it would wash |
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71:48 | You get up a flatbed, you see the upper flatbed, and we |
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71:52 | sees dunes. So we never got this line here. And we only |
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71:57 | we only got lower than that line separates the dunes from the ripples during |
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72:03 | waning flow. What that shows is for, you know, a five |
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72:07 | 67 m deep channel like Faron, velocity range in which dunes are stable |
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72:13 | about 75 to 150 cm/s or about To 1.5 m/s slower than that. |
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72:21 | gonna get ripples fashion that you're going get upper flatbed. The other |
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72:26 | which I hadn't appreciated that is that stability of dunes is relatively insensitive to |
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72:30 | depth of the flow. So whether depth 20 m or 10 m, |
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72:35 | flow velocity in which dunes is stable about a meter per second. If |
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72:39 | gets up to three m per even if it whether it's a 10 |
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72:42 | deep channel or two m deep it's going to be up a |
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72:46 | Right? And so this is the you can use the observation of the |
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72:50 | structures, whether it's an outcrop and and if you know, and you |
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72:55 | even really, really need to know channel deaths because the sensitivity of the |
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73:00 | form to trail depth is low, ? If you've got dunes, then |
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73:05 | probably, you know, if you've dunes and you don't know what the |
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73:10 | at all, you can say you're somewhere between uh, you know, |
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73:16 | to maybe 50 centimeters to meters per , 2.5 m per second. |
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73:22 | the likelihood that you have a 0.1 deep flow is, is if the |
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73:26 | beds are bigger than 0.1 m, know, it can't be that small |
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73:29 | there are no rivers or 100 m . So, I mean, you |
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73:32 | , you can, you can pretty get to a velocity that's within a |
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73:38 | of two or three using this of course, once you've got the |
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73:46 | right, once you've got the you can here's the velocity shows the |
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|
73:57 | , this is the manning equation that the velocity is equal to the hydraulic |
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|
74:02 | , which is essentially the depth times square in slope. And if you |
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74:07 | what the velocity is, you know the depth is. You can solve |
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74:10 | equation and get slope right. So are the ways you can use some |
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74:13 | these parents. Hundreds of equations to things that you might want to |
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74:18 | And again the slope is going to and changes the slope. They're going |
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74:20 | be cause things like nick points, going to drive things like incision and |
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74:26 | in slope. Also required some sort tectonic tilting. Right? And then |
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74:33 | course, if you know the velocity you know the cross sectional area of |
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74:36 | channel, then you can calculate a discharge. So we go back to |
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74:42 | strike section and that allows us to mapping the the plan view. Paleo |
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|
74:50 | of these deposition systems here, we've a short face and yellow river delta |
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74:55 | green and overlaid by channel here, channel there. And so there's the |
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|
75:02 | geographic reconstruction. So there's the there's obliques tricare crop belt. There's the |
|
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75:11 | dip outcrop belt. And so that's that's the geometry put together for this |
|
|
75:17 | . So it looks like you got incised valley. So the incised valley |
|
|
75:24 | books. Yeah, the inside's valley , is this thing here, |
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75:36 | There's there's the incised valley, there's inter flu and its size all the |
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|
75:39 | to that point there. And then get these delta system that it feeds |
|
|
75:44 | number six, there is a cross in this section here. The incised |
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75:52 | here, and we've got a short here and there's a short face on |
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75:58 | other side and it's not intersected by cross section and we've got a delta |
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76:02 | the middle. That's basically how we them out. Not that not that |
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76:09 | again, what that allows us to is to link a given in size |
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76:15 | river with the associated delta. if we know how long that river |
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76:25 | cutting, how long that river how long that valley existed. |
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|
76:29 | This comes back this issue of time we can get an idea of the |
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|
76:34 | because we know how many power sequences are, We know how many sequences |
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76:37 | are, We know the total amount time. So, if we |
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76:41 | you know the six sequences, If take a 7 to 50,000 years to |
|
|
76:45 | that by six sequences, we get on the scale of about 100 20,000 |
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76:50 | per sequence. And the sequence includes incised part. Transgressive partner Hiestand |
|
|
76:57 | So we just say, well, third of its associated with the falling |
|
|
76:59 | and low stand, Maybe the river sitting in that hole for 20, |
|
|
77:04 | , something like that. Right. not perfect, but it gives you |
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|
77:07 | of a Some idea, right? know? And boy, if that |
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77:11 | was sitting there for 20,000 years, enough time for it to cut a |
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77:14 | wide valley. So the width of valley is compatible with the amount of |
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|
77:18 | that we have available for that river be, to be working Now. |
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|
77:24 | also have mapped the limits of the directly fed by the river, so |
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77:29 | the sink. Remember I talked about to sink so we can map that |
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|
77:34 | , we know how thick it is enough places that we can, we |
|
|
77:37 | get a pretty good idea of the of sand in that sink. So |
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|
77:43 | we've got a river That sat there maybe 2,025,000 years something like that. |
|
|
77:50 | feeding sediment into that sink and we've an idea of what the discharges in |
|
|
77:58 | in, in m3/s. That gets bit of a problem. How do |
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|
78:05 | go from cubic meters per seconds, kilometers of sediment per year delivered to |
|
|
78:11 | , to the shorelines? And that's tricky part of this source to sink |
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|
78:18 | . However, you do what good do use empirical methods. There's lots |
|
|
78:24 | folks have compiled flood frequency and recurrence for global rivers. We've got some |
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|
78:31 | on what the climate was like in and time. We know it's not |
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78:35 | very big system. There's only, was only a few 100 km from |
|
|
78:38 | shore line to the mountain front that these probably didn't cross any climate zones |
|
|
78:43 | the, in the process. We've palan ology that tells us this in |
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|
78:48 | is an ever wet environment. Not if it was monsoon or not, |
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|
78:52 | all of that, all that kind information can be modeled and extracted, |
|
|
78:59 | know, a pretty good rule of is that most rivers are in flood |
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|
79:03 | maybe 10 to 15 days a And the rest of the time rivers |
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|
79:07 | doing very much right. I how many, how many, how |
|
|
79:10 | weeks a year to the texas rivers flood? Not every day, not |
|
|
79:16 | week, maybe once twice a You know, maybe a week or |
|
|
79:20 | years. You got a bit of . And so that's generally true. |
|
|
79:24 | ? You know, uh and so go look, okay, So If |
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|
79:27 | assume that the rivers were, were that maximum discharge for say 14 days |
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|
79:33 | there was a flood maybe once every years, maybe a recurrence frequency of |
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|
79:37 | years, then you can say, , so during that 14 days and |
|
|
79:43 | it was 1.5 times a year, it's 14-plus 7. So maximum 20 |
|
|
79:48 | of, of, of, of discharge year, you can convert the |
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|
79:53 | discharge to a discharge for that flood . There's also empirical equations, you |
|
|
79:59 | use to say if, you know water discharge, you can figure out |
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|
80:03 | much bed load and how much sediment load the rivers were carrying. It's |
|
|
80:08 | empirical based, right. There's lots empirical civil engineering data on this. |
|
|
80:13 | , there's uncertainty, but that's what did. Okay. Now, what |
|
|
80:18 | did was calculate sort of some medium and high cases to give us |
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|
80:21 | ranges Gabe. So we've got we've some, you know, a range |
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80:27 | uncertainties on the mean bank. Full From ranging from 3.3 up to 5.5 |
|
|
80:33 | deep, Which could range from 75 to maybe a couple of 100 |
|
|
80:39 | You've got some some constraints on that sizes. Again, we measured |
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|
80:45 | I already told you we've got some good ideas of slopes. Right? |
|
|
80:48 | in general, the slopes are kind now here saying that the sort |
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|
80:52 | you know, 3 to 5 times to minus four, We've got some |
|
|
80:56 | of velocity ranging from 1.6 to just of two m/s. Then we've got |
|
|
81:02 | estimates of water discharge From maybe a 100 up to a maximum of |
|
|
81:09 | Uh And then based on that, can calculate an instantaneous bed load |
|
|
81:15 | And then we simply integrate that instantaneous load transport in cubic meters per |
|
|
81:21 | Assume that the river is in flood 14.6 days per year. And that |
|
|
81:25 | us an average yearly bed load. ? And then we multiply that by |
|
|
81:30 | duration that we think the river was in this case, we thought it |
|
|
81:33 | be about 14,000 years. And that us a total bed load volume |
|
|
81:38 | In a billion cubic meters. And I think that that results in |
|
|
81:45 | in three, 2, km3 of . Well, now we've got a |
|
|
81:52 | , we can compare that directly to map volume of, of, of |
|
|
81:56 | in the actual uh area that we and see if it makes any |
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|
82:03 | Okay, now, the total amount sand that we map. So this |
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82:09 | here, Okay, we figured that about 2.4 km3 of sand. |
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82:18 | Our low estimate said that the river have delivered, delivered three km cubic |
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82:23 | of sand. We map 2.5 cubic . That sounds pretty like a pretty |
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82:29 | match to me given the uncertainties. we said it could be as much |
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82:34 | 10, of course that would you know, that there's less probability |
|
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82:38 | on the high side. Um Let's that, let's say there was three |
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82:44 | bit more. What that would tell is that maybe we've lost some sand |
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82:50 | that, that not all the sand river delivered, is there, wait |
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82:55 | minute. We've also got ashore face we know that some of the sand |
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82:59 | coming out and some of it is carried down drift. So when you |
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83:03 | the shore face in, you add few cubic kilometers of sand. And |
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83:07 | when you go into this offshore, still quite a lot of very fine |
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83:13 | into bed with those pro delta And it's not, it's a nontrivial |
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83:18 | . The flip side is most of very fine sand is being carried as |
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83:21 | load, not bed load, whereas lot of the short faced sandstone is |
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83:26 | sand and would have been carried as load stops at the mouth bar and |
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83:30 | get reworked. We reworked down So in the end we felt that |
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83:37 | , we thought that the uh the estimate that we made of the scent |
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83:42 | in the delta can be accounted for we probably had a significant amount of |
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83:47 | transported along shore in the longshore drift . So we were pretty excited about |
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83:55 | because it sort of told us that sources think estimates seemed to be kind |
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83:59 | certainly well within an order of You know, the, the sediment |
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84:04 | estimated was being delivered to delta was with an order of magnitude of the |
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84:09 | that we could map in the actual sink. Now suspended loads a little |
|
|
84:14 | harder because the clay can go anywhere . And the mud load is typically |
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84:21 | times the bed load. But that us some idea of what the total |
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84:26 | budget is in the basement. Not course becomes important if you're playing those |
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84:31 | those mud stone plays. The other we're interested in was constructing the size |
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84:38 | the drainage basins and uh and we some work on that. I won't |
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84:43 | won't go into all the details on . Now another thing that we thought |
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84:50 | was so the slide on the left unpublished. That was the map that |
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84:58 | . J. Made of of the the of that sequence too. Indifferent |
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85:06 | sequence. One of the youngest sequence is the one that we can link |
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85:09 | the shore faces. The youngest sequence ends in florida and we don't know |
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85:13 | it fed that that that the the is missing. It's up near and |
|
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85:17 | away and you j mapped a single narrow valley and you know, we |
|
|
85:23 | that was a perfect good map. know, he's got his values being |
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85:28 | a kilometer wide. But I just telling you the Columbus, 40, |
|
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85:32 | valley is 40 km wide. So this map needed some revision. |
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85:38 | Also the parallel currents kind of show rivers are programming that way. But |
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85:44 | the area that you j had no , he kind of suggested that the |
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85:49 | coming from the south Thanks. And know, here we've got the po |
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85:56 | basin, you know, that's you , Alpine basin and eventually it all |
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86:04 | into a single trunk river and finally is little delta, right? So |
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86:09 | is the source to sink systems for and so the idea is maybe this |
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86:13 | a prototype system. Now there was a a couple of hypotheses. Jim |
|
|
86:24 | , we talked about a little you know, put together the geology |
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86:28 | the Faron notam. And and this parrots delta, which is where ki |
|
|
86:33 | worked and suggested that maybe most of sediment is coming from the south. |
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86:39 | the cretaceous interior seaway has a western and then it's got a kink uh |
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86:48 | these Mongolian highlands are, and they an old rift shoulder uplift that provides |
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|
86:55 | that builds to the north. In , you got the severe or genic |
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|
87:00 | and the cordillera magmatic arc that delivers from the west. So we have |
|
|
87:04 | completely different source distinct systems. what's interesting is they have very different |
|
|
87:10 | historical signatures. The Mogollon Highlands, 1.81.9 billion year old Zircons. Where's |
|
|
87:18 | cordillera magmatic arc is cretaceous zircons and fold and thrust belt is largely |
|
|
87:25 | Okay, so one hypothesis is, got sort of one single large major |
|
|
87:32 | system and it deposits the Norton then the last chance then back steps |
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|
87:38 | feeds the corporal. It's and maybe vernal delta is in there somewhere. |
|
|
87:44 | there's a completely alternative view, which that each of these deltas is fed |
|
|
87:48 | completely different drainages, a much more style of drainage. That was a |
|
|
87:55 | that tom rare, who unfortunately since away, but he did a lot |
|
|
87:58 | work on the Faron in the you had to completely competing hypotheses who |
|
|
88:04 | this big river that was convulsing over producing these big delta wedges, or |
|
|
88:10 | had a bunch of rivers feeding deltas was sort of coalesced. Uh you |
|
|
88:16 | , a series of coalesce deltas and you'll permit me. Mhm, just |
|
|
88:42 | me a sec here. Remember in slide, we talked about the fact |
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|
89:20 | when you're in the basin has low glacier aesthetic changes. And the |
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|
89:28 | we've got changes that are 50 m about the maximum change. Again, |
|
|
89:33 | small compared to Icehouse Times when it be over 100 m or more. |
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|
89:41 | what that means is that even at stands, you just don't have enough |
|
|
89:45 | area exposed to allow rivers to converge make big trunk rivers. And so |
|
|
89:52 | cretaceous is more like the Canterbury where all you ever has is a |
|
|
89:58 | of smaller rivers. Maybe there's a bit of chance for one or two |
|
|
90:01 | come together when sea level drops, but not so much. Okay, |
|
|
90:07 | to go back to that point. anyway, so we've got these these |
|
|
90:30 | hypotheses, you know, one is we have sort of just one major |
|
|
90:33 | river that fed a bunch of the others, we just have a |
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|
90:37 | of rivers that never quite came And if that's true, we should |
|
|
90:41 | differences in to trial Zurich, on vernal should have no Mongolian uh to |
|
|
90:46 | to, Zurich opens the last chance , probably none. But we might |
|
|
90:51 | the notam and the comparison to be rich into tribal zircons from the Mongolian |
|
|
90:58 | . So my PhD student, David decided to sample the Notam Delta and |
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|
91:05 | sampled the various terraces in this compound filled and so reminding, reminding here |
|
|
91:13 | that compound valley fill in Nielsen Walsh we sampled each of these different |
|
|
91:22 | Now we are also very influenced by bloom. So mike bloom was working |
|
|
91:26 | the gulf coast deltas and showed you a bunch of small rivers, the |
|
|
91:31 | that browses the colorado and so and forth. And at low stands, |
|
|
91:37 | they remain separate sometimes, for at low stand, the tyranny and |
|
|
91:41 | come together and the colorado and this river coalesced together. So you might |
|
|
91:47 | a couple of rivers coming together, a slightly bigger delta at low stand |
|
|
91:51 | that high stand. And rather than mhm rather than sticking with the jays |
|
|
91:58 | of a single big trunk stream, browser style dave Kinison went ahead and |
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|
92:04 | remapped the valley system and said, a minute. It looks like there's |
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92:11 | separate river systems that are feeding this . So it's not one delta fed |
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|
92:16 | one river. So in fact we 47, maybe it looks like the |
|
|
92:22 | these coalesce, you know, there's crosstalk hair. Okay, So he |
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92:26 | forced his map of the valley to more like the fraternity of the gulf |
|
|
92:32 | . So we're using the modern to how we envisage the the ancient As |
|
|
92:37 | to just assuming one Trunk Valley and a map that it was good for |
|
|
92:42 | day, but perhaps wasn't so So here's an example of the two |
|
|
92:49 | or con data and I'm not gonna into huge detail on this. But |
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|
92:55 | you have is is whole bunch of here. So blue represents the old |
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|
93:06 | , I think represents the older Uh pink represents the younger terrorists. |
|
|
93:12 | we've got a judge from left to . So 4.5 billion years on the |
|
|
93:16 | , zero on the left. You see this huge peak in about 90 |
|
|
93:20 | years. Those are the zircons that coming from the volcanoes. And you |
|
|
93:24 | see some of these zircons have a of yellows. That's a lot of |
|
|
93:29 | stuff. Okay, then you can this blue peak. It's very high |
|
|
93:33 | some of these samples, some of samples have a mix of lots of |
|
|
93:38 | and the blue is Mongolian and some there's almost no Mongolian or it's it's |
|
|
93:44 | , it's very subdued and we get greens and yellow, which is coming |
|
|
93:50 | the corner and fold and thrust So it's very clear. So here's |
|
|
93:56 | here's the various regimes, You've got severe fold and thrust belt, the |
|
|
94:01 | highlands. And then you've got the magmatic arc. Okay. And the |
|
|
94:07 | Highlands have this very distinct blue The severe has a subdued Mongolian peak |
|
|
94:14 | it's got a much stronger green and peaks which represents Grenville Ian too, |
|
|
94:23 | fold and thrust belt sand stones in , which is uplifted paleozoic rocks. |
|
|
94:30 | , the Jurassic early night, which be the Navajo which covers the whole |
|
|
94:34 | and erosion of the Jurassic Navajo probably some of that sand got into |
|
|
94:39 | and again, that has almost no peak and it's got mostly grand village |
|
|
94:46 | and a lot of paleozoic stuff. , so it tells us that |
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|
94:50 | some of the sand stones had a contribution from the fold and thrust belt |
|
|
94:56 | some of the sandstorms were mostly drive erosion of the Mongolian highlands. So |
|
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94:59 | actually have two separate river systems feeding big delta complex. So the |
|
|
95:05 | by definition is fed by different drainage . It's not what we were expecting |
|
|
95:10 | all. In addition, this was nice little thing. We did some |
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|
95:16 | basic old fashioned photography. I just at Montecristo in courts feldspar analytic fragments |
|
|
95:22 | we found that the sand stones derived the southern Mongolian areas. We're, |
|
|
95:30 | showed a transcontinental to mixed tectonic affinity they were more or less uh fellas |
|
|
95:40 | , whereas the severe material was. definitely lit carrionites And they that represents |
|
|
95:47 | blue crosses exit. Sorry. So saw very, very distinct and separate |
|
|
95:54 | composition. Right? Here's why this valuable. This is much cheaper than |
|
|
95:59 | the tribal zircon work. You gotta the sand stones to segregate them. |
|
|
96:03 | got to separate the zircons. You've to irradiate them. You got to |
|
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96:07 | them. You gotta zap them in mass. Spec it's 600 bucks for |
|
|
96:11 | do. We actually get them done cheap. We get about $5 is |
|
|
96:15 | but you do about 300 Americans per . You do four or five |
|
|
96:19 | And your it's 3000 bucks. The work, Take a sample cut a |
|
|
96:25 | section for $10 and take spend a hours looking at microscope. And you |
|
|
96:30 | , but of course without calibrating the to the cut to the basic |
|
|
96:35 | You know, Now we've got that can do more of that. We |
|
|
96:37 | to worry about the zircon so So. David. Uh whoops. |
|
|
96:45 | matt. Um The so these are the the the general we saw three |
|
|
96:52 | , right? We had the we the Mongolian source valley. Now this |
|
|
96:58 | this is valley. Three terrorists. , what's interesting in terrorist three is |
|
|
97:02 | the northern valley shows more corny Aaron sheets and the southern valleys McCoy in |
|
|
97:08 | . So it's that's nice too because tells us that the southern valleys represent |
|
|
97:13 | that were draining from the south north the northern valleys represented rivers were draining |
|
|
97:18 | the west to the east. And the segregation of valleys is rather nice |
|
|
97:23 | does show us That that the older was formed by two separate rivers draining |
|
|
97:29 | areas. We see an increase of in source, in valley too, |
|
|
97:34 | with only a little bit of of source material, western source material, |
|
|
97:38 | of it from the south and then southern valley. We see um |
|
|
97:44 | in the youngest valley we see evidence a much greater sourcing from the severe |
|
|
97:50 | thrust belt. So very complicated source sink relationships, not what we were |
|
|
97:56 | at all. Young young lee was student of mine who did work in |
|
|
98:02 | north area and in a series of aerated cross sections. Very nice work |
|
|
98:08 | the various valleys. We did a of work in this Nielsen wash area |
|
|
98:13 | that wait while we had done then valley dive subsurface. We want to |
|
|
98:18 | at the northern area which was maybe 10 km north and see if if |
|
|
98:24 | valley looks the same. Young young that the oldest valley is more tight |
|
|
98:31 | or flood based the second terrorist is capped and the youngest family shows almost |
|
|
98:38 | estrogen influence at all. That was . We saw the oldest family looked |
|
|
98:43 | it was more tight influenced, so in segment, remember we talked about |
|
|
98:48 | maybe closer to the shore line. valley two looks like it's a bit |
|
|
98:52 | away from the shore line and V looks like it's the furthest away from |
|
|
98:56 | shore line. What would that correlate ? So we're looking at, we're |
|
|
99:02 | at one place in the photography, got message valleys and the valley fills |
|
|
99:07 | getting more flu viel as we go . What could control that. We |
|
|
99:17 | this was a pretty clever story The gun. Well that changes |
|
|
99:29 | Now here's the wheeler diagram, But is the interpretation at time one the |
|
|
99:34 | cuts, but it's, it's pretty to the shore line. So it's |
|
|
99:38 | the title backwater because this is a along long lived forced aggression at time |
|
|
99:47 | the next valley cuts and now the is further away. So it takes |
|
|
99:54 | . In this, let's maybe drop a still stand for any marine influence |
|
|
99:57 | enter the valley at a time for shoreline drops yet again and the valley |
|
|
100:03 | deeper and it's just too far away the shore line to ever be marine |
|
|
100:08 | . So, exactly right here's a diagram of the entire valley system |
|
|
100:15 | just emphasizing the dark chris nature of terraces that overlying the value fills and |
|
|
100:23 | oldest ones tend to be marine influenced they got more fluid, real |
|
|
100:28 | and we think that these are younger not 100% sure, but looks like |
|
|
100:33 | . One, V. One cuts V. Two. Anyway, of |
|
|
100:38 | , just to go back to sort wrap this part of the story |
|
|
100:42 | you know, originally in the in excellent sequence trickery, they had very |
|
|
100:47 | sea level fall and the assumption was there wasn't much time to generate |
|
|
100:53 | So you everywhere just produces degradation of . So I just introduced a new |
|
|
101:00 | . Right. And incised valley is elongated topographic load cut by a river |
|
|
101:06 | smaller than the elongate topographic low. that fit the definition of an incised |
|
|
101:20 | that I just gave, yep, that are smaller than the topographic |
|
|
101:33 | So does that fit my definition of incised valley of suit. And so |
|
|
101:51 | would say no and I would always yes. So the problem is On |
|
|
101:58 | Diagram, we've got four separate and values at least two of them. |
|
|
102:05 | blue one is rivers draining from the and the pink is reversed rating from |
|
|
102:11 | south. So, you know, hard to call this one incised |
|
|
102:17 | It's an incised landscape. You there's four separate valley systems. So |
|
|
102:23 | thought, you know, I thought calling this a mega valley because of |
|
|
102:27 | witch, maybe it's just a degradation landscape. You know, that consists |
|
|
102:31 | a series of adjacent valley systems, ? For valleys that form a valley |
|
|
102:38 | at any rate. Clearly it's it's not a simple incised valley. |
|
|
102:42 | it's at least a compound valley, it's not only compound in terms of |
|
|
102:46 | cutting fills, it's also compound in of multiple valleys over a wide |
|
|
102:51 | Right? You know, that's 40 of of separate sized valleys with inter |
|
|
102:57 | in between. And you know, not what we're expecting, but you |
|
|
103:03 | , but it looks way more like modern incised valley system which you have |
|
|
103:07 | rivers at the coast like we see the gulf coast that might bloom |
|
|
103:11 | So we really forced this um we forced this map to look like the |
|
|
103:18 | . Now I'm getting a bit upset now because Dave tried to publish his |
|
|
103:25 | . Dave's problem is when he writes paper gets so huge, gets a |
|
|
103:29 | hard to manage. It got rejected revisions and that was two years ago |
|
|
103:34 | we haven't got around to making the . But I like I love this |
|
|
103:39 | , I need to kind of take just kind of clean it up and |
|
|
103:41 | it a bit clearer. Right? because that's a really important story to |
|
|
103:45 | told right? He did get one out where he described his tributary valley |
|
|
103:50 | kind of a whole separate, complicated , but we didn't quite get to |
|
|
103:55 | the story of this mega valley system I think he got a little bit |
|
|
103:58 | in the forest and the big story missing. But I don't know, |
|
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104:05 | got a book to write, I've these papers that I have to |
|
|
104:09 | I've got this class, I gotta , I've got a life to live |
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104:15 | I'm not, you know, I'm, I sometimes think I'm a |
|
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104:18 | lazy. Like I like to sleep , you know, I don't, |
|
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104:21 | like to work smart and focused. told me I'm a workaholic. I'm |
|
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104:26 | , I'm not a workaholic and I my weekends off. I'd like to |
|
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104:30 | to my wife, listen to go to concerts. But then I |
|
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104:34 | all this stuff that I'm like, , I should, this should be |
|
|
104:37 | . Right? Mhm. So so that led to this figure, |
|
|
104:44 | is in the, well I say new. I feel like I wrote |
|
|
104:47 | yesterday, but it's quite a few ago that john Holbrook and I wrote |
|
|
104:51 | , john Herbert wrote the paper and kind of added to it. So |
|
|
104:54 | bypass model is sort of the quintessential model for sequence photography, right? |
|
|
105:00 | know, you you, you, cut a big valley. So a |
|
|
105:04 | topographic valley with maybe a few scrapping deposits and most of the fill is |
|
|
105:09 | , low standard transgression in contrast. say, well, you know, |
|
|
105:14 | river cuts and it cuts more but it sort of leaves terraces |
|
|
105:19 | So in the end you get a that looks exactly the same. The |
|
|
105:23 | is the erosion of surface was never at one point in time. |
|
|
105:27 | he liked the strong and popular idea of a strata, graphic erosion surface |
|
|
105:32 | would know there was never a topographic . And we sort of had this |
|
|
105:37 | that is that the river is cut then cover the irrational surface kind of |
|
|
105:43 | leaving terraces of potentially quite widely different , producing a strata. Graphic erosion |
|
|
105:51 | that has very widely, that has that cover a wide time span such |
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106:00 | a falling stage terrace might feed a downstream. And as the force progression |
|
|
106:07 | and the sequence banding rights over its deposits over a young adult deposits. |
|
|
106:14 | sequence boundary ends up lying on the of young delta deposits with older terrorist |
|
|
106:20 | above the sequence boundary in a more position. And that gives that annoying |
|
|
106:25 | of all terrorist deposits above the erosion surface landward. And that erosion surface |
|
|
106:32 | is actually younger because it's Dia Cronus overriding younger delta positive seaward direction because |
|
|
106:38 | sequence boundary is highly dia chris. , so it's not a single through |
|
|
106:46 | time surface. Anyway, this paper received over 100 quotes. So, |
|
|
106:53 | are paying attention to that story. , the last thing that we did |
|
|
106:59 | the Faron mm hmm. The last we did um was went to the |
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|
107:11 | south of fremont river, lots of in this sweet water wash everywhere |
|
|
107:17 | And you know, some of the , the clips are pretty high up |
|
|
107:21 | that the marine stuff was all below surface. But this beautiful low network |
|
|
107:26 | political stuff was perfectly exposed and easy get around. I was reluctant to |
|
|
107:31 | that first because I wasn't quite sure photography. So this was a later |
|
|
107:36 | and a bunch of bunches of to students stand fixed to Susa and Omar |
|
|
107:43 | and then family photo we just call bodega for short who was one of |
|
|
107:49 | Nigerian students were a nice guy and decided to do a fairly small |
|
|
107:53 | Can't say anything about panty Sauls and know, but it is a real |
|
|
107:57 | person to shy but outgoing at the time. And he tunneled off too |
|
|
108:04 | and did some work with steve Greasy is a world expert in panty souls |
|
|
108:08 | steve gave us some excellent advice that him understand the the palace also |
|
|
108:15 | So we've got, you know, marine power sequences. We get the |
|
|
108:19 | valley, a nice compound, incised and then we get this inter bedded |
|
|
108:24 | , mud stones. This is all marine and then there's a sharp contact |
|
|
108:29 | into transgressive blue gate shales. The of the, of the sort |
|
|
108:32 | one of the last projects was on to rip apart this low nut to |
|
|
108:38 | package. And remember when we talked sequencing, we talked about pay Lysol |
|
|
108:43 | Right, Marriott. And that So I thought, well let's see |
|
|
108:46 | we can find out what the police surfaces are doing again. I've shown |
|
|
108:52 | all these pictures before. There's there's geologist looking at these lower network growth |
|
|
108:58 | inter bedded with floodplains with beautiful it trees. There is an example of |
|
|
109:05 | schematic payments on the left and an of a paley saul from the fan |
|
|
109:09 | the right. And boy, they pretty well. Most of the firm |
|
|
109:13 | solves what we call history calls, means they have an O. Or |
|
|
109:18 | horizon. Iaea peat or coal or shale in general are immature because it's |
|
|
109:25 | very dry. So they're immature soils history calls. They do have horizon |
|
|
109:32 | . So here we've got the the the bi layer which is largely leached |
|
|
109:38 | we have an upper B. And lower B. And then the C |
|
|
109:41 | is the bedrock in this case, is an older crevasse play. That |
|
|
109:46 | that is And floodplain that has been a little bit and cracked. And |
|
|
109:52 | those roots in the kind of see roots in these, in these police |
|
|
109:57 | . So we've got these glade or palace halls. The gray color applies |
|
|
110:04 | wet. We don't see any evidence quality which would be evaporates that you |
|
|
110:09 | see in a dry palace all we abundant roots again, which tells you |
|
|
110:14 | the and the and the roots are preserved carbon. So again the roots |
|
|
110:19 | not particularly liquefied, they're not salaciousness they're certainly not replaced with carbonate. |
|
|
110:24 | get poorly developed, so called pet . These are the structures that formed |
|
|
110:29 | wetting and drying of the soils. get these cracks and you get material |
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110:33 | in the cracks. These are poorly in the ferret, which again is |
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110:37 | of ever wet conditions. Of course get the coals and carbonaceous shales implying |
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110:43 | high organic matter content that again tells in every environment. So there's sort |
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110:50 | an example of what the vegetation looked to produce the coal. Um bought |
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110:58 | sort of had had done his master's on by activation. So he had |
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111:03 | of the bar activation index, which the degree of borrowing by organisms, |
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111:07 | sediments. And so we thought about a slick inside index which is the |
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111:11 | of cracks in the mud that didn't out so well. But he decided |
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111:16 | sort of estimate the degree of which is sort of the degree of |
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111:20 | disruption by roots. So he put a routing index first one to ever |
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111:24 | that. So quite clever and I at this police all here. So |
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111:29 | the crevasse play, it's over land flood plain mud and then it's over |
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111:33 | by this colon pete. And in he put this routing index shows that |
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111:37 | routing increases towards that surface there, represents the period of maximum exposure. |
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111:43 | then essentially we have a little rise the water table and we get the |
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111:47 | developed. Right? So in terms sequence photography, the exposure surface would |
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111:54 | there. Okay. And then that be over land probably by a little |
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112:00 | surface or water table increased surface. could be the landing land would equivalent |
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112:06 | a transgressive surface maybe. So we sort of have a little bit of |
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112:10 | cycle even in these pearly assaults. so here's an example of his measured |
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112:15 | . Obviously it's hard that the the index is zero in the sand stones |
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112:21 | its high typically just below the And in some cases you can see |
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112:26 | sort of this upward increase in the index. The other uh concept that |
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112:33 | put together. So Stacy actually who's professor at at Baylor University worked with |
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112:40 | Greasy. His graduate student was Dave , who now works next on and |
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112:47 | an internship with Exxon. So he's working with Tim Demko and Dave Cleveland |
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112:51 | Exxon. And so he decided to this concept of flu viel aggregation all |
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112:57 | and it flew generational cycles could be floodplain to corvus, to flood, |
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113:02 | flood plain, mud stone, couple comedy capped by a call. Or |
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113:06 | could be a channel filled. These be grouped influential congregational sets. And |
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113:11 | sort of the equivalent of facing successions paris sequences in the non marine |
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113:17 | Okay. And you know, ultimately , the idea is that the stack |
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113:22 | full fledged Floreal sequences. So body of integrated, you know, the |
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113:30 | geology of a crevasse play with a plain, mud stone or lake deposit |
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113:35 | top that gets routed and then it's flamed by a peat swamp deposit. |
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113:41 | , And, and then the cycle and it wrote it wrote it into |
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113:45 | channels that find upwards. And we cycles of channel finding as well. |
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113:50 | would be one flew viel aggregation of . There will be another one |
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113:56 | And so here's an example from mary flavia aggregation of cycles from the will |
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114:01 | formation Wyoming. This is similar to fairest formation that, that this hijack |
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114:10 | , Heller and Ben sheets. Did Cressy function on random avulsion cluster |
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114:16 | Anyway, getting close to finishing So this is the cross section of |
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114:22 | non marine faces along sweetwater wash. got the black hole's correlated, you've |
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114:28 | these pink paras plays and levy And then he got the channels with |
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114:33 | accretion shown with the gray and more sandy cross bedded channel films shown |
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114:38 | the yellow, uh, and and some of the flyby inauguration cycles |
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114:42 | across the whole area. And this not a massive area. So maybe |
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114:46 | forgot what I can't really read the there. A few few kilometers, |
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114:51 | a nice example of the correlation of , channel belts and flew viel. |
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114:56 | cycles. There is the same cross with the uh with routing index and |
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115:03 | can see that those are systematically correlate across the area. That gives you |
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115:08 | eye that the floodplains are pretty And Dave Kennison has done similar work |
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115:13 | his PhD and then we can integrate flotilla generational cycles plus the detailed |
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115:20 | And then we can go ahead and to look at the at the sequences |
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115:24 | systems tracks again. Sorry about the word wrapping here. We've got the |
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115:31 | stance systems tracked representing the incised sand valley fill that goes from transgressive systems |
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115:39 | that culminates in the coal that marks high stands. Okay, so that's |
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115:44 | the high stand here. Sorry, stand. Systems tracked. Transgressive system |
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115:54 | cut by cole and it looks like may be another transcription assistance track |
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115:59 | Then going into another Hiestand systems track and that should be up there. |
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116:04 | TST was here. Yes. So the cross section below where we've got |
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116:10 | sequences and systems tracks and then brody to a wheel diagram of that's |
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116:18 | He discovered that there were 21 fleabag . All cycles Developed in sequence one |
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116:24 | 2, nine FAC sets three high sequences suggesting maybe 30,000 years duration. |
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116:34 | since got back and redone the bentonite and looks like it's even faster. |
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116:41 | 20,000 to 10,000 duration. So these very high frequency non marine cycles. |
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116:50 | , so that was the original sequence . And then they went ahead and |
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116:54 | identified an additional Hiestand and transgressive systems . So he actually identified some type |
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117:00 | sequences in the upper non marine Ah But so yes, police calls |
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117:12 | and the flu the aggravation cycles, integrates the channel film. Yeah, |
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117:16 | integrated growth, right stacking of illegal as well as correlation of the police |
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117:22 | cycles and the routing index. Okay dan fixed D'Souza and Omar Montes. |
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117:32 | focus was more on on mapping the along sweetwater wash. And the channels |
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117:38 | very scale, some of them very , amalgamated others very small. Then |
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117:42 | the coals and the corvus plays and and levy deposits and in green and |
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117:49 | . What they did is they mapped channels across sweetwater wash. So they |
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117:54 | air crops on one side, their on the other side. And they |
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117:57 | able to track them from one side the other. That allowed them to |
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118:02 | the width of the channel belts based their paley flow directions. And so |
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118:09 | mapped what is it here? 11 and map the wits of them and |
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118:15 | plotted those on the gambling diagram which we talked about. So here's |
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118:20 | on the horizontal horizontal axis and thickness the vertical axis. And it suggested |
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118:27 | these channels are kind of down in delta distributor very uh system. |
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118:34 | again, you know, remember the I asked if you see channels they |
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118:38 | distributed or trunk. And so we've found the trunk channels. Those are |
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118:43 | incised valleys. But in this low to gross floodplain, it looks like |
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118:47 | actually on the delta plane, We do see evidence of large marine |
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118:51 | surfaces. Here we see evidence of transgressive and high stand, and we |
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118:57 | evidence of that, of channel belt that are more compatible with with this |
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119:05 | channels. So, again, another of using these plots of of width |
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119:10 | thickness to to give you an idea where in the system you might be |
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119:14 | in the source of sex system you be. Yes, there's uncertainty |
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119:18 | I mean, you know, it lies within the braided rivers, but |
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119:22 | know these aren't braided uh and with meandering, but they so they could |
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119:28 | meandering, distributor berries. Mhm. in contrast, the fair and valleys |
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119:33 | right within the realm of of of classic valley fills within alluvial Murray in |
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119:43 | up. So we felt pretty good that. Okay, I've got a |
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119:49 | of world sports slides. I'll let guys read, let you read those |
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119:54 | your own time. Okay, so obviously covered a lot, But hopefully |
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120:08 | example reinforces some of the fear I about in the last two uh |
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120:15 | Okay. I think what we'll do is we'll take our lunch break, |
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120:19 | okay. And then uh it's What time you want to come back |
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120:27 | me? Do you wanna do that ? Do you want to do that |
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120:33 | lunch? Yes, let's take a minutes for questions about silence. Come |
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120:42 | take a look for sure. I don't think it works right |
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120:54 | Right, that's right. Whatever is for you. Absolutely. And |
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121:08 | if you've got questions about assignments, can I mean after lunch we'll do |
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121:12 | Deepwater lecture and then we'll spend the of the down assignments. I think |
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121:19 | what we'll do. We can finish if you feel like it. I'm |
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121:24 | feeling pretty good. I wasn't sure had a lot of food, I |
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121:27 | sure how it was going to kind settle, but it's I think I'm |
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121:31 | . It wasn't very well last but I was okay this morning, |
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121:34 | I skip breakfast, didn't have any because I was a bit worried how |
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121:38 | would feel. So okay, I want that. Okay, multiple partisans |
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121:55 | now share. Mhm. Okay, . Right, right now thanks. |
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123:21 | see how do I do this. we go. I just went to |
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124:29 | , so okay go ahead, First threshold. So much truth |
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124:50 | Which yeah thanks. Okay mm I mean yeah, no that's |
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125:58 | I think it's over here probably as as I can make it. I |
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126:18 | where my annotate has gone. I annotate it. It was down |
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126:24 | Oh, but anyway, so I what I would do is I would |
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126:32 | take that and have that truncated by channel if you like for that and |
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126:37 | looks like it might caution upwards so might just take that flooding surface there |
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126:41 | I'll probably just take it into their little thing there and you know, |
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126:46 | it's building up in this younger valley cutting it out right? But I |
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126:51 | over client informed that there here. not quite sure what that surface is |
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126:58 | . So you've got a flooding surface , right? That's going to go |
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127:01 | here. You got a base, haven't drawn your Samson yet for your |
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127:06 | . So I would maybe start drawing sand stones in, right? So |
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127:15 | can draw a shot at the base that funnel Suzanne at the base of |
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127:19 | one. Then maybe that correlates to channel and it goes back to a |
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127:24 | . You know, he got a , it's kind of getting silty. |
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127:26 | good. But I would just drop platform down to there there. |
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127:36 | that's good. Yeah, yeah, of these conflicts might be a little |
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127:43 | too steep, probably won't take marks for it, but you know, |
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127:46 | might might be a little bit, know, there is quantum farms. |
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127:51 | they're more aggressive, sometimes a bit aggressive. Start thinking about drawing some |
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128:03 | like in here that's a bit I think want to put that right |
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128:06 | top of the sand, they're right there, right up there. There |
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128:19 | go, yep. And that's where got a decision point, you take |
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128:23 | down there, take it up to one, Right? So that you |
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128:27 | take that. Yeah, you might that. Yeah. And that's going |
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128:39 | change these correlations here a little Right? So, and I don't |
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128:46 | there's a big platforms here. I that just keeps going there. I |
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128:50 | that's probably pretty flat. I'm not what that line is there, but |
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128:58 | not a season. Right? And sand is very thin. Okay, |
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129:04 | a gamble. Okay. Yeah, there's no line, you know that |
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129:10 | , there's nothing ideological about that line . Right? You can stop the |
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129:13 | surface and then just pinch out that if you think it back steps. |
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129:32 | ? Mhm. Maybe maybe there's a funding surface there, there's one |
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129:38 | so you know, and then you connect up with this stuff here. |
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129:46 | ? Yeah, I think that stuff fairly layer cake at that point. |
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129:50 | you go, I like that better see it is converging right? There |
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130:06 | go. This might correlate with that and end up there could be for |
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130:25 | restaurant they subtly said. Yeah. yeah, the city's population yeah |
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130:43 | Yeah, yeah, yeah, there's stuff going on there again. This |
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130:59 | might go a bit higher so maybe that and just think about that a |
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131:05 | bit, you know, because that's think that's that there this is probably |
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131:14 | there. So I think I don't that this bentonite doesn't truncate like |
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131:20 | these correlate down. Yeah, so think that's where you've got in a |
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131:24 | bit of trouble there and I think still too high. Get rid of |
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131:29 | one here. I don't think that laps which is truncated Then get this |
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131:37 | one. See that surface there is that surface there. Mm hmm. |
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131:50 | , I think, I think you're this too flat. I would erase |
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131:55 | and erase that, erase that one raise this one. Yeah. Now |
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132:03 | this and take it to their like and take it to their Yeah, |
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132:11 | you go. And not feel it . That makes that's I like that |
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132:29 | . No question. Yes, pardon . Yeah, yeah, probably something |
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132:41 | that. Yeah. See in this here it goes to there and that |
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132:54 | thing is that little thing there right . Is there a double it, |
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133:23 | could be about right, yeah, . You know, you're doing a |
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133:33 | job. So just get some shoes in there and uh yeah, that's |
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133:39 | nice job. Other questions. Put something else up with Dennis. |
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134:37 | , very good. Okay, so me, I think we'll take a |
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134:45 | |
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