Milankovitch climate cyclicity and its effect on relative sea level changes and organic carbon storage, Late Cretaceous black shales of Colombia and Venezuela
Conference
·
· AAPG Bulletin (American Association of Petroleum Geologists); (United States)
OSTI ID:5998198
- Univ. of Colorado, Boulder (United States)
The Late Cretaceous Villeta Group and La Luna Formation shows remarkable depositional cyclicity attributable to Milankovitch climate cycles. Each 30-60 cm thick hemicycle is composed of a basal gray shale, a medial black, organic-rich shale, and an upper gray shale with a dense argillaceous limestone cap. Fourier time-series analysis revealed peak frequencies of 500, 100, and 31 ka (blending 21 and 42 ka data). ThiS cyclicity reflects possibly wet cooler (shale) to dry, possibly warm (limestone) climatic changes and their influence on relative sea level, sedimentation rates/patterns, productivity, water chemistry and stratification. Wet/cool hemicycles may produce slight lowering of sealevel, increased rates of clay sedimentation, diminished carbonate production, water stratification, increased productivity among noncalcareous marine plankton, and increased Corg production and storage. Dry/warm hemicycles may produce a slight rise in sealevel, and return to normal marine conditions with low Corg storage. Source rock quality may depend upon the predominance of wet over dry climatic phases. Differences between climate-forced cyclicity and random facies repetition, are shown by contrasting observed lithological patterns and geochemical signals with litho- and chemostratigraphy generated from random models. Accomodation space plots (Fischer plots) for cyclically interbedded black shale-pelagic limestone sequences, allowed prediction of facies behavior, shoreline architecture, and quantitative analysis of relative sea level. The synchroneity of Milankovitch cycles and changes in hemicycle stacking patterns, were tested against a new high-resolution event-chronostratigraphic and biostratigraphic framework for NW South America. Geochemical spikes and hemicycle stacking patterns occur consistently throughout the sections measured, supporting the correlation potential of cyclostratigraphy.
- OSTI ID:
- 5998198
- Report Number(s):
- CONF-930306--
- Conference Information:
- Journal Name: AAPG Bulletin (American Association of Petroleum Geologists); (United States) Journal Volume: 77:2
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Conference
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Wed Sep 01 00:00:00 EDT 1993
· AAPG Bulletin (American Association of Petroleum Geologists); (United States)
·
OSTI ID:6964364
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Journal Article
·
Sun Nov 13 23:00:00 EST 2011
· AAPG (Copyright) Search and Discovery
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OSTI ID:1060231
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Conference
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· AAPG Bulletin (American Association of Petroleum Geologists); (United States)
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OSTI ID:6105952
Related Subjects
03 NATURAL GAS
030200 -- Natural Gas-- Reserves
Geology
& Exploration
58 GEOSCIENCES
580000* -- Geosciences
AQUATIC ORGANISMS
BLACK SHALES
CARBONATE ROCKS
CHEMISTRY
CLIMATE MODELS
CLIMATIC CHANGE
COLOMBIA
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
FOSSILS
GEOCHEMISTRY
GEOLOGY
LATIN AMERICA
LEVELS
LIMESTONE
LITHOLOGY
MATHEMATICAL MODELS
MATHEMATICS
PALEOCLIMATOLOGY
PALEONTOLOGY
PETROLOGY
PLANKTON
ROCKS
SEA LEVEL
SEDIMENTARY ROCKS
SEDIMENTATION
SHALES
SOURCE ROCKS
SOUTH AMERICA
STRATIFICATION
TIME-SERIES ANALYSIS
VENEZUELA
WATER CHEMISTRY
030200 -- Natural Gas-- Reserves
Geology
& Exploration
58 GEOSCIENCES
580000* -- Geosciences
AQUATIC ORGANISMS
BLACK SHALES
CARBONATE ROCKS
CHEMISTRY
CLIMATE MODELS
CLIMATIC CHANGE
COLOMBIA
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
FOSSILS
GEOCHEMISTRY
GEOLOGY
LATIN AMERICA
LEVELS
LIMESTONE
LITHOLOGY
MATHEMATICAL MODELS
MATHEMATICS
PALEOCLIMATOLOGY
PALEONTOLOGY
PETROLOGY
PLANKTON
ROCKS
SEA LEVEL
SEDIMENTARY ROCKS
SEDIMENTATION
SHALES
SOURCE ROCKS
SOUTH AMERICA
STRATIFICATION
TIME-SERIES ANALYSIS
VENEZUELA
WATER CHEMISTRY