Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-7cvxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T12:16:59.596Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Upward coarsening sedimentation units and facies lineages, Old Red Sandstone, Scotland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2011

B. J. Bluck
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, Scotland.

Abstract

Proximal braided stream deposits of the Old Red Sandstone of central Scotland are characterised by a variety of upward coarsening units formed during downstream migration gravel bars. Transitional variations in thickness, grain size and structure of these units, and their associated sediments are used to establish facies and paths of facies change (lineages). Three facies lineages are recognised which are interpreted as recording the downstream changes the structure of sediments of three different types of braided river systems. Lineages differ from each other in proportion of sandstone, channel depth and the structure of upward coarsening units: lineage 1 represents alluvium formed in a river system which produced texturally mature gravels and which increased in depth downstream; lineage 2 comprises sediments deposited in shallow channels which become shallower downstream; lineage 3 represents a downstream change from conglomerate to sandstone and from an unchannelled to achannelled regime.

Stream depth and ratio of sand to gravel exert fundamental controls on the structure of alluvium. Thick (thickness >50 m) sections showing vertical changes in clast size often comprise single facies lineage. Thick upward coarsening sequences are found with lineages 2 or 3 and upward fining with lineage 1 or 3.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1986

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bertram, G. T. 1978. The sedimenlology of some fine-grained braided streams in Southern Iceland. Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Glasgow University.Google Scholar
Blodgett, R. H. & Stanley, K. O. 1980. Stratification, bed forms, and discharge relations of Platte braided river system, Nebraska. J SEDIMENT PETROL 50, 139–48.Google Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1971. Sedimentation in the meandering River Endrick, SCOTT J GEOL 7, 93138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1976. Sedimentation in some Scottish rivers of low sinuosity. TRANS R SOC EDINBURGH 69, 425–56.Google Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1979. Structure of coarse grained braided stream alluvium. TRANS R SOC EDINBURGH 70, 181221.Google Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1980. Structure, generation and preservation of upward fining, braided stream cycles in the Lower Old Red Sandstone of Scotland. TRANS R SOC EDINBURGH EARTH SCI 71, 2946.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1982. Coarse-grained Scottish Devonian alluvium. ABSTR INTERN ASSOC SEDIMENTOL (Hamilton, Ontario, 1982), 52.Google Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1984. Pre-Carboniferous history of the Midland Valley of Scotland. TRANS R SOC EDINBURGH EARTH SCI 75, 275–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boothroyd, J. & Ashley, G. 1975. Processes, bar morphology, and sedimentary structures on braided outwash fans, North eastern Gulf of Alaska. In Joplin, A. V. & McDonald, B. C. (eds) Glaciofluvial and glaciolacustrine sedimentation, 193222. SPEC PUBL SOC ECON PALEONTOL MINERAL 23.Google Scholar
Bull, W. B. 1972. Recognition of alluvial-fan deposits in the stratigraphic record. In Rigley, J. K. & Hamblin, W. K. (eds) Recognition of ancient sedimentary environments, 6383. SPEC PUB SOC ECON PALEONTOL MINERAL 16.Google Scholar
Cant, D. J. 1982. Fluvial facies models and their application. In Scholle, P. A. & Spearing, D. (eds) Sandstone depositional environments, 115–37. MEM AM ASSOC PETROL GEOL 31.Google Scholar
Cant, D. J. & Walker, R. G. 1978. Fluvial processes and facies sequences in the sandy braided South Saskatchewan River, Canada. SEDIMENTOLOGY 25, 625–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collinson, J. D. & Thompson, D. B. 1982. Sedimentary structures. London: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Conybeare, C. B. E. & Crook, K. A. W. 1968. Manual of sedimentary structures. BULL BUR MINER RESOUR GEOL GEOPHYS AUSTR 102, 1327.Google Scholar
Dabrio, C. J. & Fernández, J. 1983. Genesis y evolucion de Barras conglomeraticas en un Rio de Baja Sinuosidad (Depresion de Granada, Espana). MEDITERRANEA SER GEOL 2, 328.Google Scholar
Fernández, J. & Dabrio, C. J. 1983. Los conglomerados de Moraleda: un modelo de sistema fluvial de tipo braided (depression de Granada, Espana) ESTUDIOS GEOL 39, 5369.Google Scholar
Friend, P. F. & Moody–Stuart, M. 1972. Sedimentation of the Woodbay Formation (Devonian) of Spitsbergen: regional analysis of a late orogenic basin. NORSK POLAR INST SKR 157, 177.Google Scholar
Galloway, W. E. 1981. Depositional architecture of Cenozoic Gulf coastal plain fluvial systems. In Ethridge, F. G. & Flores, R. M. (eds) Recent and ancient non-marine depositional environments: models for exploration, 127–55. SPEC PUBL SOC ECON PALEONTOL MINERAL 31.Google Scholar
Graham, J. R. 1983. Analysis of the Upper Devonian Munster Basin: an example of a fluvial distributory system In Collinson, J. D. & Lewin, J. (eds) Modern and ancient fluvial systems, 473–83. SPEC PUBL INT ASSOC SEDIMENTOL 6.Google Scholar
Gustavason, T. C. 1978. Bed forms and stratification types of modern gravel meander lobes, Nulles River, Texas. SEDIMENTOLOGY 25, 401–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harms, J. C. & Fahnestock, R. K. 1965. Stratification, bed forms and flow phenomena (with an example from the Rio Grande). In Middleton, G. V. (ed.) Primary sedimentary structures and their hydrodynamic interpretation, 84115. SPEC PUBL SOC ECON PALEONTOL MINERAL 12.Google Scholar
Hayward, A. B. 1983. Coastal alluvial fans and associated marine facies in the Miocene of the S. W. Turkey. In Collinson, J. D. & Lewin, J. (eds) Modern and ancient fluvial systems, 323–36. SPEC PUBL INT ASSOC SEDIMENTOL 6.Google Scholar
Hein, F. J. & Walker, R. G. 1977. Bar evolution and development of stratification in the gravelly, braided, Kicking Horse river. CAN J EARTH SCI 4, 562–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jablakov, V. S., Botvinkina, L. N. & Feofilova, A. P. 1961. Sedimentation in the Carboniferous and the significance of alluvial deposits. 4TH CONGR STRATIGR GEOL CARBONIFERE, 293300.Google Scholar
Massari, F. 1983. Tabular cross-bedding in Messinian fluvial channel conglomerates, Southern Alps, Italy. In Collinson, J. D. & Lewin, J. (eds) Modern and ancient fluvial systems, 287300. SPEC PUBL INT ASSOC SEDIMENTOL 6.Google Scholar
McGowen, J. H. & Garner, L. E. 1970. Physiographic features and stratification types of coarse grained point-bars: modern and ancient examples. SEDIMENTOLOGY 14, 77111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKee, E. D., Crosby, E. J. & Berryhill, H. L. 1967. Flood deposits, Bijou Creek, Colorado, June 1965. J SEDIMENT PETROL 37, 829–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miall, A. D. 1977. A review of the braided river depositional environment. EARTH SCI REV 13, 162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morton, R. A. & Donaldson, A. C. 1978. Hydrology, morphology and sedimentology of the Guadalupe fluvial deltaic system. BULL GEOL SOC AM 89, 1030–36.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nilsen, T. H. 1982. Alluvial fan deposits. In Scholle, P. A. & Spearing, D. R.Sandstone depositional environments, 4986. MEM AM ASSOC PETROL GEOL 31.Google Scholar
Ore, H. T. 1964. Some criteria for recognition of braided stream deposits. UNIV WYOMING CONTRIB GEOL 3, 114.Google Scholar
Picard, M. D. & High, L. R. 1973. Sedimentary structures of ephemeral streams. Developments in Sedimentology 17. Amsterdam: Elsevier.Google Scholar
Ramos, A. & Sopeñia, A. 1983. Gravel bars in low sinuosity streams (Permian and Triassic, central Spain). In Collinson, J. D. & Lewin, J. (eds) Modem and ancient fluvial systems, 301–12. SPEC PUBL INT ASSOC SEDIMENTOL 6.Google Scholar
Rust, B. R. 1972. Structure and process in a braided river SEDIMENTOLOGY 18, 221–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rust, B. R. 1979. Facies models 2, Coarse alluvial deposits. In Walker, R. G. (ed.) Facies models, 921. GEOSCI CAN REP 1.Google Scholar
Smith, N. D. 1970. The braided stream depositional environment: Comparison of the Platte River with some Silurian clastic rocks, north central Appalachians. BULL GEOL SOC AM 81, 29933014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, N. D. 1972. Some sedimentological aspects of planar cross stratification in a sandy braided river. J SEDIMENT PETROL 42, 624–34.Google Scholar
Smith, N. D. 1974. Sedimentology and bar formation in the upper Kicking Horse River, a braided outwash stream. J GEOL 82, 205–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steel, R. J. 1974. New Red Sandstone floodplain and piedmont sedimentation in the Hebridean province, Scotland. J SEDIMENT PETROL 44, 336–57.Google Scholar
Turnbridge, I. P. 1981. Old Red Sandstone sedimentation—an example from the Brownstones (highest Lower Old Red Sandstone) of South Central Wales. GEOL J 16, 111–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, G. E. 1971. Flood deposits of the sand-bed ephemeral streams of central Australia. SEDIMENTOLOGY 17, 140.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zaitlin, B. A. & Rust, B. E. 1983. A spectrum of alluvial deposits in the lower Carboniferous Bonaventure Formation of Western Chaleur Bay area, Gaspe and New Brunswick, Canada. CAN J EARTH SCI 20, 10981110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar