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00:01 | OK. Uh We, we have much done Marginal Marie. Uh We've |
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00:09 | at ti flats, we've looked at Strand Plains, uh Barrier Islands, |
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00:17 | , uh estuaries. Uh The trick is to see what is beyond |
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00:24 | And, and let me just say the beginning, uh there was a |
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00:31 | within my lifetime, at least that have what they call the sand line |
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00:38 | the sand line was basically a line you draw someplace along the shelf beyond |
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00:48 | there was no sand. So you sand love and, and of |
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00:54 | we knew there was sand off but we thought uh it must be |
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01:01 | sand from low stands. And as find out now, uh there's a |
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01:08 | of sand on the shelf and there's lot of ways of getting sand to |
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01:11 | on the shelf. So let's look some of the processes that are going |
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01:16 | . Uh You're looking at oceanic you're looking at tides, you're looking |
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01:26 | weather related uh wind generated waves and looking at the effect of density uh |
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01:36 | uh being mainly the hyper and uh hugging flows and the homo uh |
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01:46 | Uh One of which is you're looking right here that large plume uh crossing |
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01:53 | , the Texas Coast. Uh The of the show is really important. |
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02:02 | We can have broad shelves, we have a steep shelf ramps. Uh |
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02:07 | can have V shaped of re entrance the shelf. Uh These are going |
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02:14 | affect the relative importance of different kinds processes. We've, we've alluded to |
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02:20 | with respect to the relative importance of versus tides on a V ship shaped |
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02:27 | like uh the German bike. For , uh we've talked about the fact |
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02:32 | as you get a delta pro grading deeper and deeper water, the shelf |
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02:40 | is getting shelf edge is getting closer the shelf width, is getting |
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02:47 | So there's less and less attenuation So, uh we're gonna see how |
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02:51 | things interact, the the interaction of currents and shelves. And this is |
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02:57 | much a function of the geometry of shelf. The shelf itself, of |
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03:02 | , is to a large extent, function of the tectonic setting, which |
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03:07 | the topic, the whole lecture we get into. But clearly the idea |
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03:11 | a about passive margin, trailing margin a uh tectonic active margin is gonna |
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03:21 | one you, you have in your in some place. So, Galloway |
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03:26 | again, uh finds a way of a triangle of something. And so |
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03:31 | , he envisions that you have tides and then storm slash currents. |
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03:43 | the problem I have in part is storm and waves. It, it's |
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03:50 | little unclear in, in my mind now, uh the distinction and when |
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03:55 | talked about currents, um, that's actually a, a rather different |
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04:03 | because those are oceanic currents which are up by movements of water masses. |
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04:10 | , um, about the, pretty much the same time. Uh |
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04:18 | and Baldwin published something they say, know, we really ought to pull |
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04:21 | oceanic currents and that makes a lot sense. Um So I'm gonna treat |
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04:27 | currents. Um And then tides not that order. And I'm gonna, |
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04:33 | gonna kind of combine storms and Um And we'll, we'll kind of |
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04:40 | with those main processes. Let's begin tides. If we look at the |
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04:46 | tial areas, these are where we're have the tidal, the most extensive |
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04:52 | of tidal flats. Uh We're gonna tide dominated estuaries and tide dominated |
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04:59 | But let's look at this area right here where we can look at a |
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05:02 | dominated shell. And so as we at various areas around um the United |
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05:10 | , uh and France, we see uh the title prism if you like |
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05:19 | , is funneled through uh the English and then it spreads out. And |
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05:25 | there are significant accelerations of tides in of these areas. And in particular |
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05:35 | area here, I'm gonna focus on because this is an area of major |
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05:40 | sand deposition on the shelf. If look at the way tides generate, |
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05:48 | I'm not gonna really go into this to say that uh there, there |
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05:54 | co tidal lines which is say where high tide is at any one time |
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06:01 | they kind of sweep around a center . And that shows the an increase |
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06:08 | then decrease uh of tidal velocity which be measured by maximum near surface currents |
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06:17 | spring tides. So we go from centimeters per second to 100 and 25 |
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06:25 | per second. As that tide is . I have envisioned that in your |
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06:31 | of thinking that this is just we're focusing it into more and more |
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06:37 | space. In reality, it has do with this warping of the tidal |
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06:42 | . And frankly, it's too hard me to explain, but this is |
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06:47 | easy to visualize and what we see that area if we were to look |
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06:52 | the tidal ellipse. And what that is to look at the tidal direction |
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07:02 | time over one title cycle. Uh not actually like this. It's gonna |
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07:10 | some as it breaks down, it's dwp a little bit. So that's |
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07:14 | , this is an area though, mean, uh uh it shows the |
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07:19 | of the dominant uh titled direction as splays out. And as we look |
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07:29 | that area, we find a whole of linear sand ridges that are aligned |
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07:36 | to those tidal ellipses. So let's at one series of uh uh sand |
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07:51 | right here. These are pretty Their heights are up to 40 m |
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08:00 | . uh their crests are in water of 10 to 15 m and the |
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08:05 | flank is about five degrees. And reason I focus on that is that |
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08:11 | tend to exaggerate the steepness of these when we look at them in diagrams |
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08:18 | seismic and we'll see an example of shortly. OK. Also notice that |
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08:24 | are ridges that go deeper and deeper deeper in water depths. OK? |
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08:33 | The short answer is those are old or those are old ridges that were |
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08:38 | when sea level was a little So we're gonna see as sea level |
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08:43 | , you begin to shut down the ridges and new ridges form. |
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08:50 | we find these linear tidal sand ridges over the place, we find them |
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08:56 | with the Amazon. We actually looked those uh when we were uh looking |
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09:03 | uh and logs and Xan Del uh we get them over here. |
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09:09 | We get them in uh also of Thai dominated deltas, but they go |
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09:15 | the delta. In fact, we them down here in the Persian Gulf |
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09:20 | in the China Sea. Um they in most of these high tidal range |
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09:28 | . Now, this is that cross , I was talking to uh about |
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09:32 | they are asymmetrical. They do have steep and gentle side, but that |
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09:37 | side is Less than 5°. OK. but the other thing to notice is |
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09:44 | the internal lamination at least based on suggests they are migrating laterally, migrating |
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09:54 | the direction. Oh The steep even though the flow seems to be |
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10:03 | right angles or along the face rather slip face. And, and the |
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10:09 | happening is you've got a dominant flow this direction and then a subdominant flow |
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10:15 | . And so the dominant flow goes the uh lee side or I'm |
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10:24 | the stove side or gentle sleep but then wraps around and comes back |
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10:31 | the steep side. OK. Um so what you end up having is |
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10:38 | dominant flow causing erosion on the backside net deposition on the down on the |
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10:49 | side. OK. And part of is that as we'll see in a |
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10:53 | that oblique low here is gonna result sand waves working across and then down |
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11:04 | steep face and back up to seat , the majority working back up to |
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11:09 | face. We have sand waves sand waves here. Yeah. So |
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11:20 | look at that in a second. Going back to this one here. |
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11:25 | I want to look at in the right here. This is a, |
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11:32 | sea Satellite image and the government put up in the 1980s to look at |
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11:41 | sea surface L sat was basically designed look at the map. Uh Sea |
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11:47 | looked at the water surface and there a shockingly good mimicry of the surface |
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11:58 | the bottom. Now, what is is that it could be seen literally |
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12:07 | the point of sand waves we're looking , in these linear sand dunes, |
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12:12 | I mean, linear tidal ridges and asymmetry. I mean, just everybody |
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12:18 | shocked when they saw that. Um began to imagine, oh what, |
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12:25 | a wealth of information is gonna come of this. Uh The government shut |
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12:29 | off or maybe better said it was longer available for the public. The |
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12:35 | is it was too good and you see the wake of submarines. Uh |
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12:40 | so uh that source of bath meric uh was lost. But uh when |
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12:48 | look at this area, uh we've doing bath the metric surveys for a |
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12:53 | time. And so these same sand that are climbing up these linear sand |
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13:04 | , um The sand waves are up 15 m high Wavelengths of 20 to |
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13:12 | m. And it turns out that an eight year period at an |
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13:17 | you can see them migrate on the of uh hundreds of of, of |
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13:26 | . OK. And so you can them migrate. But mathematically, and |
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13:34 | you get side scans, this is uh reflector rather but you still see |
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13:41 | internally, you're looking at net migration reactivation ridges. OK. Now, |
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13:56 | reminds me of linear sand. This me of some large compound waves that |
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14:12 | transfers that are in rivers and even transverse dudes, Edwards big slip faces |
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14:26 | to 10, you know, 15 m high uh can occur in |
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14:32 | lot of settings. And so you be thinking about a compare and contrast |
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14:46 | uh transverse bed forms Idol fan So on blue sand. Yeah. |
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14:56 | Now having said that, let's look at the maximum currents, remember I |
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15:02 | it goes up to 100 and 25 spring tides. Uh You can look |
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15:11 | the depth limit below which you cease have sand wave move. OK. |
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15:18 | that's basically saying there's some velocity below these sand waves don't move. The |
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15:27 | is that that velocity in the winter much higher than the velocity in the |
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15:41 | . Oh, I'm sorry. Uh , I'll show that in a |
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15:44 | Uh But that velocity or maximum movement coincides with the maximum tide is different |
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15:55 | on whether or not it's a ne mean tidal range which this is I'm |
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16:01 | , with a maximum tidal range versus mean. And I actually don't remember |
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16:07 | this is a mean or maximum during spring time. Ok. So |
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16:15 | get under spring tide, you get tidal sand waves moving in great greater |
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16:22 | that in times. Not a What is a surprise is that water |
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16:28 | makes a difference, the warmer the , the deeper the band waves are |
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16:37 | to move that. You know how in the world would, would |
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16:43 | uh be a factor? Uh for viscosity, remember when we talked |
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16:50 | the bed phase diagrams and we oh, there's a lot of |
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16:55 | but we're gonna lump things and variables density and viscosity and blah blah |
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17:01 | So we said, let's assume the is fresh water at 20 degrees |
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17:08 | We did that to keep the salinity density of water this constantly and also |
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17:15 | keep the viscosity because it turns out are big deals. And the temperature |
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17:22 | of the water in the North Sea large enough. And I would argue |
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17:27 | in the Bering Sea and certainly in Arctic but to significantly extend those uh |
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17:36 | , and, or contract the uh that we uh are likely to see |
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17:44 | of different forms. OK. Uh the title Sandridge 25m high. And |
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17:55 | uh we see that same, same . Yeah. Uh This is the |
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18:01 | from um and what I want to out is here is um one of |
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18:09 | deltas, I forget which one in East China Sea and this whole area |
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18:18 | areas of linear sand ridges. Um Down in here, these are |
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18:27 | to as Paleo tributary, uh a mouth and they probably did initiate his |
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18:36 | bars. But then as sea level and we kind of looked at that |
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18:42 | tide dominated deltas, those linear Sandridge become detached, but they're still |
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18:51 | except that at some point they become . So these way down here are |
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18:57 | , these are variably active and these constantly active. So this is just |
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19:03 | an interpretation of those deep ridges and some of the very uh some of |
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19:11 | variability that you get. But most that the sand ridge is dominantly laterally |
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19:19 | . OK. This room right we get huge sandwiches uh in m |
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19:27 | many shelves. Uh This is actually of Newfoundland and it's the Georgia Banks |
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19:37 | it's actually an important fishing area among . And we see that there are |
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19:42 | long linear troughs, you've got these of tuning fork bifurcations. And as |
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19:49 | get uh high up, you you have an asymmetrical uh bar and |
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19:56 | you have these waves or proposed dunes coming up the, the flak, |
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20:07 | less deeply dipping flank of this linear . OK. So the water is |
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20:14 | up like this and back like this like this, back like this wavelengths |
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20:22 | hundreds of meters and heights of 6 10 m, typically up to 18 |
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20:30 | , Current velocities up to 75 So it's pretty, it's certainly enough |
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20:36 | move stand during uh certainly during spring and even during uh some uh |
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20:47 | OK. So as we look at sand waves, um you can go |
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20:56 | something that has a uh basically a of proposed death to one that has |
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21:11 | reversal movement and the dip gets lower you begin at some point to have |
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21:19 | migrate down that. So finally, looking at uh just an amalgamation of |
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21:27 | riding up and then down the back . OK. Um I'm not gonna |
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21:34 | into this right now. This turns to be a useful diagram for a |
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21:41 | of reasons, but it's all I you to think about is simple sand |
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21:50 | two complex compounds that way. As showed earlier, we've got this |
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21:58 | it's comes going up and then back way, uh that reverse flow can |
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22:05 | cause it to make a kink and separate. We see those kinks they |
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22:15 | right here. We separated in here it's separated. OK. So that's |
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22:22 | pretty common way and probably is what's those tuning fork ations. Now, |
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22:33 | mentioned that there is a gradation from moving uh sand ridges and relatively shallow |
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22:47 | to if you like relic sand ridges deeper water. Now, they're actually |
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22:55 | mob sandwiches, which means in the of dying. Um And that's probably |
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23:03 | a bad term. They are areas there was a, an active sand |
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23:09 | , but now it's kind of being a little bit and eroded on the |
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23:14 | , uh we saw this a little with the, with the sand ridges |
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23:21 | were formed by submerges of uh the Delta. Uh They gradually got less |
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23:30 | less active and began to be reworked other processes. So, on the |
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23:35 | shelf, when they're active, they're steep and then eventually they begin to |
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23:41 | eroded down. And so we get two stage morphology and package of sediment |
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23:56 | structures active and then dying where it's being uh gradually reworked, still has |
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24:05 | topographic expression. Uh But it's no uh the way it was. |
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24:13 | So we can talk about then the ridges and we can talk about tidal |
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24:20 | waves. Ok. Um So these two different large sand bodies. These |
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24:31 | occurring in some cases, the sand on top of the sand ridges. |
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24:36 | cases, we'll see the sand waves , can be uh disconnected from |
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24:43 | OK. Well, we saw both of both. So this is a |
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24:48 | diagram to kind of remember as a section to think about how they might |
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24:54 | these might look and how they might . And as we'll see in a |
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24:59 | , we can then compare these with generated waves on the shelf. But |
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25:05 | we do this, let's look at title bet forms and realize that they |
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25:15 | depending on whether that's a low sand high sand supply region. Now, |
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25:21 | general with bye to low um bad . In fact, I'll skip over |
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25:32 | . Uh We see this pro gradation this fay track with decreasing strength. |
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25:40 | go for mainly erosion with these little ribbons to ridges to dunes, the |
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25:50 | dunes with sand sheets. That's a good model for what we get |
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25:58 | Low sand. We never really get bar cans. We don't get these |
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26:02 | ridges unless you have a lot of . OK. We only get these |
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26:06 | ridges. We have a lot of . And I think this is that |
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26:12 | can imagine, yes, as analogous a wind field. Uh the Eoan |
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26:22 | sheets that we get in the big earths where we have downstream changes in |
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26:29 | velocity and in the rate of sand and therefore changes in the types of |
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26:36 | . OK? And I think that be an interesting project to, to |
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26:40 | as a term paper is not a quiz, but uh there are similarities |
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26:47 | obviously differences as well. Now, look at one of these uh titled |
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26:54 | bars. This would be one of sand waves made. Uh It also |
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26:59 | be a sand ridge and we get a a complication we have right here |
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27:10 | . We got a ridge with the going like this. So that this |
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27:18 | a longitudinal bar, this is a bar yet in cross section they kind |
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27:25 | look similar. And so in in field, it's sometimes questionable whether we're |
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27:34 | at a laterally or rather a down I'm sorry, down tide transversing sand |
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27:44 | or a laterally migrating longitudinal bar. , here we have a field example |
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27:56 | um we've got it migrating seaward. In this case, the geometry implies |
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28:03 | it is a more of a transverse or, or mouth bar. Uh |
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28:08 | can break it up into packages and we could look here at one posting |
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28:18 | sequence and we could look break that into a series of dead sets from |
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28:26 | lithic to more uh standard units were um spring tidal bundles shown here. |
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28:39 | co upward sequence is the same as see here. Worst thing upward |
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28:45 | Uh We actually saw something like this the last lecture on uh tidal deposits |
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28:53 | tidal sand bars. Now we're they're farther offshore with the same general |
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29:00 | . Uh And we saw it here well now with these sand bars or |
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29:08 | waves rather. Um Here it's earlier interpreted as a sand ridge, was |
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29:16 | interpreted as a sand bar. It back and forth. But let's, |
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29:20 | just look at it like this. is low sand supply to maximum sand |
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29:29 | and maximum migration. This is now full ridge and then we're beginning to |
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29:35 | the sand supply and the wave energy beginning to die down until finally, |
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29:44 | this. Oops um the um I'm uh down in here is this model |
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30:01 | where we have recorded the growth and the abandonment. OK. And |
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30:13 | if that looks a lot like um inception, growth and destruction of San |
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30:20 | I think there's a lot of analogies that. So let's look at a |
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30:25 | example. This is the Santa Margarita my scene in California. I showed |
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30:31 | this the very first day to emphasize you can get pro grading bed forms |
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30:44 | very high ski uh a very uh and high um in non Eoan |
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30:55 | Uh This is one set uh that you of what I said earlier. |
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31:01 | is a zone of non erosion, non deposition or erosion that's full of |
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31:08 | . So it's a marine surface. ? Uh Here we have that surface |
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31:13 | and you can see the sets going as you look at that. I |
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31:18 | you can see there are packages and surfaces within those packages and their course |
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31:38 | fine packages. OK? You can a truncation reactivation surface here. There's |
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31:46 | here and notice here, we've actually along here. A clay rape. |
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31:53 | as we look at uh these because actually looking at grain flow but in |
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32:02 | submarine package and these are, this actually a clay dye, but these |
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32:13 | in here are clay drapes defining Uh This is that marine surface, |
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32:25 | energy erosion on the back side. again an example of those clay drapes |
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32:34 | on the bottom. Remember the reason not at the top is because they |
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32:38 | removed uh by that reactivation surface. here we have some double mud drapes |
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32:44 | in here on the bottom. And some cases, these are small sand |
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32:52 | . Ok. So they vary in from that really thick one to these |
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33:02 | small, suggesting at least two different of bar slash ridge. Wait, |
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33:13 | turns out these are bars with two scale of transverse bed forms. And |
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33:22 | one of those little mud drapes. you look at the paleo currents, |
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33:27 | basically on a shelf where there was channel that was basically connecting the central |
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33:39 | of California with the open marine Pacific . And so you had this funneling |
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33:44 | tides uh in this particular area, was abdominal in other areas, it |
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33:52 | flood dominant. And what we see uh in some areas, it's uh |
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34:03 | bioturbated. Other areas, the bioturbated uh are either not present or oh |
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34:15 | see laterally discontinuous. And then at areas, we see these huge corsets |
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34:24 | in others, we get these smaller cents. So this is basically a |
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34:33 | section of that large tract showing variations Large Scale four sets and then small |
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34:43 | four sets. Now you look up . Uh This is a measured section |
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34:59 | within that my so and we go transfer from, from tater cross strata |
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35:10 | trough cross strata to more parallel laminated strata to bio. Now, the |
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35:21 | debate, it basically says it stopped active and that could be sea level |
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35:28 | too high or maybe the current channel . But bio turb took over. |
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35:36 | . Um That's basically the same thing Galloway described um with respect to a |
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35:47 | high dominated shelf and, and uh what oops, that's what Larry Phillips |
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35:57 | as well. Uh We got reactivation . We have large scale four sets |
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36:03 | small scale four sets we got in case, it's a basal lag grading |
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36:09 | into finer grain bid centers. So you can think and then you |
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36:14 | see the paleo currents here dominantly um in this particular case. And what |
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36:24 | oceanic's currents? Um You will recall we have major currents set up by |
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36:34 | global wind belts that are deflected by , the continents that basically circle and |
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36:47 | parallel to the continental margins of the main um stream, uh the |
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36:53 | uh continents. OK. And one them, it's down in here. |
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37:00 | , I and if you look at , excuse me, um it's a |
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37:10 | that actually impinges on part of the shelf and these currents can be pretty |
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37:18 | . Interestingly, uh they can meander this one is forced against the, |
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37:26 | current uh uh force against uh South . But notice others, it begins |
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37:34 | move around and begins to meander and probably have heard of the meandering of |
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37:41 | Gulf stream. Uh, but right it's confined to the edge of the |
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37:48 | shelf and sometimes it actually impinges on shelf and sometimes it's offshore and |
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38:01 | because it, even though it's relatively , it's still meanders, it's just |
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38:06 | low seo meander. And the key that in those areas where it is |
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38:15 | on the shelf, we have a dominated shelf Landor of that, we |
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38:22 | a wave dominated show. Ok. what does it look like? |
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38:31 | it is that current dominated shelf has in the higher areas, higher velocity |
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38:43 | . Um sand waves, tidal sand and it even has as we get |
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38:51 | the highest velocities that are on the edge. We see these linear sand |
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38:59 | and grooves that we saw or at I just mentioned earlier in the highest |
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39:06 | of that track with the North going the North Sea, we had |
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39:15 | scour sand ribbons rating into either sand and or tidal ridges. And that's |
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39:25 | we have here. And those sand are up to 17 m high And |
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39:31 | are in 50 m water depth or and they're migrating high speeds off the |
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39:38 | shelf. It uh this is the plume coming out of the Amazon. |
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39:49 | This is a tide dominated delta and lot of the mud Is resuspended and |
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39:55 | maximum and it's creating, we call mud uh concentrations up 20-30% by |
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40:03 | And so it's moving as a slurry drift. And interestingly, the maximum |
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40:14 | uh at least off the mouth of delta is offshore. But as we |
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40:22 | laterally down drift to the north, begin to see these kind of waves |
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40:29 | in and we see on land, arcuate features uh that are sometimes called |
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40:43 | capes and they are essentially these mud that are migrating down drift. It |
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40:58 | something like this. Here's that oblique bank giving you these holocene deposits uh |
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41:09 | we talked about earlier with the, fluid buds and the sub A |
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41:16 | OK. And actually, uh this their, by definition, these fluid |
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41:23 | are greater than 10 g per liter 10% or they can be up to |
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41:29 | m high and they've been measured as to 48% of the weight of the |
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41:38 | and just uh almost unbelievable. So those are current, I'm gonna |
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41:46 | of ignore storm for a second and storm down here. Those are um |
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41:51 | current dominated shelves. OK. We about tide, tidal current shells. |
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41:59 | Let's look at wave and storm dominated . Storm waves are up here, |
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42:08 | with the, the 40 degrees north south. Uh We also get some |
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42:13 | of uh tropical cyclones uh which we in there as well. So let's |
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42:21 | at this area down here offshore Southwestern United uh southeastern United States shelf and |
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42:38 | actually looks a lot different then the of texts, which is kind of |
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42:45 | , we know it's a little higher , but we don't have any major |
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42:52 | coming in. That's part of So the Gulf of Mexico tends to |
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42:57 | been more muddy. Uh You can of the east coast of the United |
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43:03 | is being more sediment starved. And we tend to have transgressive shorelines. |
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43:14 | if we look offshore, the shelf a series of transgressive cheat sans, |
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43:27 | . The presence of those sheet sands basically the relics of sands during the |
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43:36 | . Now, earlier, you we had mentioned that during a rise |
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43:41 | sea level, you get a wave and we often think of it as |
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43:47 | basically an area of non deposition. then we have this regressive sequence on |
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43:59 | of it, but we mentioned earlier that erosion only occurs to some depth |
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44:09 | which we have offshore deposition, we onshore deposition here with the transgressive |
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44:17 | That's this stuff here. We have here, but look at that accumulation |
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44:23 | occurring offshore. OK. Now, can, that is our depositional record |
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44:30 | a transgression. OK. In that record of the transgression can be pretty |
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44:40 | if wave energy is low or sediment is high. In other words, |
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44:48 | package here, his bigger with lower energy or greater sediments of life. |
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45:01 | . Now, with low sediment supply high wave energy. That's that package |
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45:06 | very thin. You get it. of this was erosion before the transgression |
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45:18 | . So if we look at this here, we see and this is |
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45:24 | in your notes, I apologize. , put him in later. Here's |
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45:29 | surface, but here's actually our transgressive . And then we have the |
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45:41 | This is the maximum flooding location. ? And we have a pro grading |
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45:51 | or pro grading uh from offshore to shore face to over shore face just |
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45:59 | we talked about earlier. But now beginning to look at the shelf and |
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46:04 | pro grading, I'm sorry, that uh system here that's uh gonna be |
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46:13 | uppers. This area is reworked. know this, this is pretty |
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46:20 | What we're gonna look at is what when you with that sand where it |
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46:26 | accumulate. Now, I'll just also this and that is that not only |
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46:31 | it the effect of sediment supply and versus wave energy, but it's also |
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46:36 | effect of that, that is, affects the shelf deposition, but it's |
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46:42 | effect of sediment supply and accommodation space that affects the development of the land |
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46:50 | . Uh what's sometimes called a back wedge. So we can think about |
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46:57 | going on out here. But we think about what's going on up here |
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47:02 | how that package will accrete uh that can see on really on a seismic |
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47:09 | . Let's go back to that area the shelf. Now, if we |
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47:17 | at it, we've always said that is a high wave energy setting. |
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47:23 | look at this ridge here, look all these oblique ridges. Yeah. |
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47:39 | if we get real close, they're attached, but we uh they're not |
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47:45 | that way here, but uh they kind of in a bleak angle to |
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47:50 | shore itself. And uh we even them some cases associated with these varied |
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47:58 | , which we also have a Now, what we do have in |
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48:03 | gulf and what we're actually thinking about is the fact that transgressions rarely occur |
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48:14 | and uniformly, you can have rise sea level and a pulse, a |
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48:22 | island can form, it can even grade a little bit and then it |
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48:29 | be flooded again. So we actually on the Texas coast, some of |
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48:37 | abandoned barrier islands that are sand Uh We're interested in them as we |
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48:45 | for a source of uh offshore for beach nurse, but their sin |
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48:55 | surround it land and sea by OK. And they result of barrier |
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49:05 | . Well, in the east uh we do have barrier overstepping. |
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49:17 | what's left behind are these relic near ridges? And that's what These are |
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49:26 | . Here are the shore attached ridges one stage of, of transgression. |
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49:38 | . When the shoreline was here, were sure attached now they've become detached |
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49:49 | they're still pretty big and pretty steep they're still at least semi active and |
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49:59 | interpreted cross section looks something like You no longer see anything that might |
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50:08 | beach related or like, because even they were originally attached to the |
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50:16 | but rather you see this offshore appreciate sandy ripples up the back dunes and |
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50:28 | on the back side and the potential bi observation. Ok. Depending on |
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50:33 | deep they are. Yeah. So we got three major sand bites that |
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50:44 | can have and they're good potential reservoirs they're well sorted and they have the |
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50:51 | of being sur completely surrounded by shel . Ok. So let's envision that |
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51:02 | sequence again, it says storm think way dominated. I I treat |
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51:08 | the same. Um Here's that ment and now we've got that Grimness. |
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51:22 | is offshore deposit, storm sands from to five and then bioturbated muds. |
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51:36 | . So that's pretty much from here that is the same track that we |
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51:42 | in the pro gradation sequence as we from the inner fingered storm deposits. |
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51:50 | cross strata going into thinner deposits, into muds. So let's look |
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51:57 | at this transgressive sequence that we talked with um Mississippi Delta. We said |
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52:05 | we can see barrier islands being flooded linear goals and those shows, |
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52:20 | all over the shelf where those abandoned were. And this is one of |
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52:27 | ship shoal is now completely disconnected from Mississippi Delta, but it still is |
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52:37 | actively moving sand shoal. Now, those sand shows are gonna get buried |
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52:49 | a transgression here. The model was they were sure face connected. |
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52:59 | Uh There's a variety of ways that things can get started and then be |
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53:05 | . Here's an old valley, And here's the high stand Delta girl |
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53:14 | of this as being transgressive and This is basically I'm sorry, this |
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53:25 | the high stand, this is the and low stand. Ok. |
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53:35 | one of the things we've seen, it's not a bath, the metric |
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53:44 | that provides the source of the sand be reworked into a ridge or, |
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53:49 | rather if it is a high, associated with the levee or a |
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53:57 | And so here we have a, inlet, we've got a ridge and |
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54:05 | it is the, it initiates the migration and the sand continues to migrate |
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54:12 | away from the right away from the original precursor which may be associated with |
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54:21 | champ. There's a series of shelf , this described offshore Indonesia and they |
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54:34 | to have a sharp edge and kind elongate on this area here. And |
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54:47 | we look at those in well we see that these are sandy ridges |
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55:00 | that what we're looking at is a that the interpretation is started here and |
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55:12 | migrated. So here is the, it started and then it began to |
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55:20 | in this direction. And so that edge is called the leading edge. |
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55:24 | that straight slip face. And if were to look at the, it's |
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55:41 | got this distal erosional surface and then mud. But basically, this is |
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55:54 | to be that eroded area of as linear Sandridge migrated away from the |
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56:02 | So this is kind of what it like in cross section. And this |
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56:07 | some suggestions of where they are. it turns out these are Strat graphic |
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56:15 | in offshore uh deals in Indonesia. , looking at that transgressive sequence |
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56:27 | uh we know that transgressions uh and occur, they can get stacked on |
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56:33 | another is one cycle, two three cycles. OK. Each is |
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56:41 | represent a transgression. Yes. And we just flipped it on edge. |
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56:50 | is the prorated cycle. We've actually a lot about this portion. And |
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56:58 | , now all I'm doing really is it on to the rest of the |
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57:07 | . Now, this is a very thickened regressive cycle. Let's see this |
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57:13 | . This, that's this here And where's, oh I'm sorry. |
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57:22 | Excuse me, what I wanna do combine it with this. I I |
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57:27 | do it. OK? Uh Let just say that our pro grading |
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57:32 | the Mike cross Strat is way up top. And then above that though |
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57:37 | the short face. You know, uh transgressive cycles. The mike strata |
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57:45 | here, there is no shore face gone and we grade up into |
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57:50 | And this is just and a real example in the organ region of a |
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57:57 | transgressive sequence. And these are basically amalgamated, single transgressive sequences followed by |
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58:11 | uh regressions. Now, there's one study that's kind of interesting. Uh |
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58:19 | in the lake cretaceous in the shell , and you'll recall the Lake Cretaceous |
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58:25 | is really an epi continental seaway. underlain by continental uh deposits. It's |
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58:34 | shallow. OK. There are some in size valleys and some, some |
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58:41 | in thickness. But think of it a mainly shallow shell with sands migrating |
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58:51 | the northwest, which is the So here is the, the uh |
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58:57 | may recall uh this, these are the shore face sands. Uh The |
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59:05 | mass is here. This is where saw those big distributer fluvial systems. |
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59:11 | grade it into deltas graded into near face sands. And then we go |
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59:17 | the inner and outer shelf. There is a slope, but it's pretty |
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59:23 | . And we see these big sand that are disconnected from the inner sands |
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59:34 | they're right along in here. Here's here. Now, this is |
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59:41 | is a pack of, one is Herzog draw unit. And in cross |
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59:53 | , this is the field, a goes from shale to lenticular bedded to |
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60:03 | bedded to Frazer bedding to sandstone. almost an inverted title that sequence. |
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60:15 | And it's one that you might think is maybe could be associated with the |
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60:20 | sandwich. OK. Now, that's we look at the field that we |
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60:30 | porous sandstone here, hike sandstone And so there take a look at |
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60:43 | asymmetry here. The asymmetry is such the interpretation is this ridge is actually |
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60:59 | migrating like this and is eroding over . Ok. So when we look |
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61:09 | those sand ridges in the North Sea other areas, that's the interpretation of |
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61:16 | Shannon sandwich or at least an early . And so the vertical section here |
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61:26 | from a bated sand, well bated stone to bioturbated sandstone and the shelf |
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61:33 | central ridge going up near the top and it looks something like what Galloway |
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61:40 | have predicted. And so the interpretation , this is a separate sand ridge |
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|
61:56 | a big question is how to get . Uh This interpretation is it is |
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62:04 | title sandwich. Um But how did bypass the show? How did that |
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62:14 | get there? It, it was part of a transgressive sand sheet that |
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|
62:21 | see in the east coast? Not . I mean, it doesn't fit |
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62:27 | . Um Well, maybe it's a stand delta. So it's a relic |
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62:39 | that was reworked or maybe it was , in fact, it could have |
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62:52 | this unit that was reworked during the transgression dope. Most of the thinking |
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63:02 | is that kind of like the abandoned that are now ridges in the Gulf |
|
|
63:12 | Mexico. These bridges that are in Cretaceous were low stand sand features that |
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63:23 | then buried. But with a significant tidal range in tidal influence, |
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|
63:32 | opposed to let's say the um Gulf Mexico, which is a micro title |
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63:40 | . Now, the last example I'll be discussing is the pro grading storm |
|
|
63:49 | wave dominated shelf. This is the . We no better what I was |
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63:55 | about earlier. That's the system here we can have that occur under tidal |
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|
64:01 | or storm and wave settings. I'm focus now on the things we talked |
|
|
64:07 | earlier, the storm dominated short face show these are the estates in those |
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|
64:16 | are basically going to give you uh storm generated sand bodies extending onto a |
|
|
64:27 | shelf. They are in essence the bed that we talked about and um |
|
|
64:34 | or, or rather well in the in Canada, ok. Uh We |
|
|
64:42 | about what they look like. Um talked about little question about whether or |
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64:51 | there's actually a liquefied or, or a massive uh graded stone |
|
|
64:57 | Uh Sand here, we talked about happens when they're modified and of |
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65:02 | they're gonna be capped with mud. ? Uh We can skip that, |
|
|
65:08 | here, here's some of those muds can cap the sands, ok? |
|
|
65:19 | here's that case where we talked earlier some of these muds piling up offshore |
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|
65:29 | this is associated with a down slope . So now we're beginning to |
|
|
65:35 | well, maybe there are some currents might affect the formation of this downslope |
|
|
65:43 | . And, and that, that's basically down here, that's what |
|
|
65:46 | looking at with the sub aqueous OK. And so here there are |
|
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65:52 | oriented currents. Here are waves. Hey, we've got that Delta Clii |
|
|
65:59 | again. Here we don't. And the difference between this portion and this |
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66:14 | of that mud being deposited down Ok. Now, what kind of |
|
|
66:20 | that is, is it an oceanographic or is it just longshore currents? |
|
|
66:28 | it a storm generated current? It's not quite clear. Some cases. |
|
|
66:32 | may well be an oceanographic occurring in case is more analogous to what we |
|
|
66:36 | talking about in the Amazon. But the case, here's that high, |
|
|
66:43 | hypo pial fluid that flow that's transporting mud offshore is a plume. And |
|
|
66:56 | it gives us this offshore mud like . Well, that's really important, |
|
|
67:06 | we've also and had described sand plumes the delta is actually transporting sand as |
|
|
67:23 | as mud. And these were described Lisa sand bodies. Yeah, in |
|
|
67:39 | , um yeah, this description here the shaped of those sand bodies sitting |
|
|
67:54 | top of the mud. Ok. the idea is that when there's a |
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68:04 | promenade, we've got longshore currents that being deflected and moving offshore. So |
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68:20 | suggestion is that those offshore fields in cretaceous of Wyoming are not relic low |
|
|
68:30 | features that are reworked, but might been actually parts of these sand shows |
|
|
68:38 | street and, and we see what's as one of these downstream from the |
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|
68:48 | dominated Nile. Hey, other people argued. Well, no, you |
|
|
68:55 | . Yeah, you might say but I think it's part of a |
|
|
68:59 | stand feature. So we're still arguing this stuff. And one of the |
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69:08 | I will point out is that the literature has kind of ignored the shelf |
|
|
69:16 | PLOS. Now, I don't think really been ignored, but the focus |
|
|
69:21 | been on these mud bloops. And the reality is those mud plumes |
|
|
69:32 | be pretty sandy and they can form pics. And you'll recall that Hyper |
|
|
69:40 | can be sandy so they could actually generated from the river flooding itself. |
|
|
69:48 | maybe some of these shelf sand plumes simply the proximal portions of these hypopnic |
|
|
69:58 | . I think that's part of the . Um We've focused on the, |
|
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70:04 | mud as a driving process or The other thing is these are, |
|
|
70:10 | be two fundamentally separate processes. One a hyper flu which will be |
|
|
70:29 | The other is unrelated to the hyper rather is sediment that is deflected |
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|
70:44 | In which case it san and the of this would be longshore drip, |
|
|
70:52 | source of this would be the So we really haven't reconciled the ways |
|
|
71:04 | which we get these elongate sands. . But I'll just note that when |
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|
71:13 | look at the Yukon Delta, we a whole series of shows offshore and |
|
|
71:24 | we core offshore, they're sandy and get similar Lesia shows when there are |
|
|
71:37 | rivers. I rather just promenades with . So the sandy plumes and sandy |
|
|
71:51 | side shows exist. They're not They're not the topic of much discussion |
|
|
71:58 | now, but it's, it's important think about them in the context of |
|
|
72:03 | is being discussed. Relic sands, of relic sands and hypopnic plumes and |
|
|
72:11 | plumes. Ok. Oh, that's good place to stop. So, |
|
|
72:18 | let's stop |
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