Si Chen, E. Kvale, R. Steel, C. Olariu, Jinyu Zhang
{"title":"利用上新世“潮汐计”估算古潮汐成分——以特立尼达的古奥里诺科河三角洲为例","authors":"Si Chen, E. Kvale, R. Steel, C. Olariu, Jinyu Zhang","doi":"10.1130/b36619.1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The Neogene Orinoco Delta is one of the typical river deltas where both the records of modern and ancient tidal processes can be studied. A ∼5 m.y./>10-km-thick succession on the island of Trinidad contains remnants of paleo-Orinoco deltaic deposition preserving both tide- and wave-influenced delta lobes within the same time intervals, just like the modern Orinoco Delta that has both wave-dominated and tidal-dominated lobes. The tide-influenced delta lobes and estuaries preserve some spectacular tidal bedding signals, including tidal rhythmites. The tidal record encoded within the tidal rhythmites is preserved well enough that the primary tidal constituents responsible for the tidal currents that deposited the rhythmic facies can be inferred.\n Lower to upper Pliocene tidal rhythmites were examined in two main paleo-Orinoco sub-environments: (1) estuarine and delta lobe deposits of Morne L’Enfer Formation at Erin Bay, and (2) abandoned tidal channels associated with tide-influenced delta-front deposits from the Telemaque Sandstone Member of the Manzanilla Formation at Matura Bay. Both wave- and river-current signals are also present in most of the study areas.\n Tidal constituent analysis of unusually well-preserved paleo-Orinoco tidal rhythmites reveals a hierarchy of tidal signals that include semidiurnal, diurnal, fortnightly (neap−spring), monthly (perigee−apogee), semi-yearly, and possibly seasonal and yearly cycles that span thickness intervals ranging from millimeters to meters.\n The tidal constituents were dominated by, in decreasing importance, M2, S2, and likely K1 rather than O1. The modern tidal data clearly show that K1 is more important in terms of tide-generating potential than O1, as was likely so in the Pliocene. In both the rock and modern records, N2 is more significant than O1, P1, and K2 in terms of tide-generating potential. The comparison between the constituent analysis of the ancient tidal record and the modern tidal measurements reveals their similarities in tidal patterns and constituent types. From this, we deduce that the tidal constituents responsible for the Pliocene Orinoco Delta tides were mixed semidiurnal tidal cycles similar to those found today in Trinidad (Atlantic type of synodically dominated) rather than the Caribbean (tropically dominated) type.","PeriodicalId":242264,"journal":{"name":"GSA Bulletin","volume":"154 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-04-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Estimating paleotidal constituents from Pliocene “tidal gauges”—an example from the paleo-Orinoco Delta, Trinidad\",\"authors\":\"Si Chen, E. Kvale, R. Steel, C. Olariu, Jinyu Zhang\",\"doi\":\"10.1130/b36619.1\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The Neogene Orinoco Delta is one of the typical river deltas where both the records of modern and ancient tidal processes can be studied. A ∼5 m.y./>10-km-thick succession on the island of Trinidad contains remnants of paleo-Orinoco deltaic deposition preserving both tide- and wave-influenced delta lobes within the same time intervals, just like the modern Orinoco Delta that has both wave-dominated and tidal-dominated lobes. The tide-influenced delta lobes and estuaries preserve some spectacular tidal bedding signals, including tidal rhythmites. The tidal record encoded within the tidal rhythmites is preserved well enough that the primary tidal constituents responsible for the tidal currents that deposited the rhythmic facies can be inferred.\\n Lower to upper Pliocene tidal rhythmites were examined in two main paleo-Orinoco sub-environments: (1) estuarine and delta lobe deposits of Morne L’Enfer Formation at Erin Bay, and (2) abandoned tidal channels associated with tide-influenced delta-front deposits from the Telemaque Sandstone Member of the Manzanilla Formation at Matura Bay. Both wave- and river-current signals are also present in most of the study areas.\\n Tidal constituent analysis of unusually well-preserved paleo-Orinoco tidal rhythmites reveals a hierarchy of tidal signals that include semidiurnal, diurnal, fortnightly (neap−spring), monthly (perigee−apogee), semi-yearly, and possibly seasonal and yearly cycles that span thickness intervals ranging from millimeters to meters.\\n The tidal constituents were dominated by, in decreasing importance, M2, S2, and likely K1 rather than O1. The modern tidal data clearly show that K1 is more important in terms of tide-generating potential than O1, as was likely so in the Pliocene. In both the rock and modern records, N2 is more significant than O1, P1, and K2 in terms of tide-generating potential. The comparison between the constituent analysis of the ancient tidal record and the modern tidal measurements reveals their similarities in tidal patterns and constituent types. From this, we deduce that the tidal constituents responsible for the Pliocene Orinoco Delta tides were mixed semidiurnal tidal cycles similar to those found today in Trinidad (Atlantic type of synodically dominated) rather than the Caribbean (tropically dominated) type.\",\"PeriodicalId\":242264,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"GSA Bulletin\",\"volume\":\"154 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-04-17\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"GSA Bulletin\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1130/b36619.1\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"GSA Bulletin","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1130/b36619.1","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
新近纪奥里诺科河三角洲是研究现代和古代潮汐作用记录的典型河流三角洲之一。特立尼达岛上约5米/>10公里厚的序列包含古奥里诺科河三角洲沉积的残余物,在同一时间间隔内保存了潮汐和波浪影响的三角洲叶片,就像现代奥里诺科河三角洲既有波浪主导的叶片又有潮汐主导的叶片一样。受潮汐影响的三角洲裂片和河口保存了一些壮观的潮汐层理信号,包括潮汐韵律岩。在潮汐韵律岩中编码的潮汐记录保存得很好,可以推断出沉积节奏相的潮汐流的主要潮汐成分。在两个主要的古奥里诺科河亚环境中(1)Erin Bay的Morne L’enfer组的河口和三角洲叶状沉积;(2)Matura Bay Manzanilla组Telemaque砂岩段与潮汐影响的三角洲前缘沉积相关的废弃潮汐通道。波浪和河流信号也出现在大多数研究区域。对保存异常完好的古奥里诺科河潮汐节律体的潮汐成分分析揭示了潮汐信号的层次结构,包括半日、日、两周(小潮-春季)、每月(近地点-远地点)、半年、可能还有季节性和年度周期,其厚度间隔从毫米到米不等。潮汐组分以M2、S2和K1为主,重要性由大到小。现代潮汐资料清楚地表明,就生潮潜力而言,K1比O1更重要,这在上新世很可能是如此。在岩石和现代记录中,N2比O1、P1和K2在生潮潜力方面更重要。古代潮汐记录的成分分析与现代潮汐测量结果的比较,揭示了它们在潮汐模式和成分类型上的相似性。由此,我们推断,上新世奥里诺科河三角洲潮汐的潮汐成分是混合的半日潮汐循环,类似于今天在特立尼达发现的潮汐循环(以天气为主的大西洋型),而不是加勒比(以热带为主)类型。
Estimating paleotidal constituents from Pliocene “tidal gauges”—an example from the paleo-Orinoco Delta, Trinidad
The Neogene Orinoco Delta is one of the typical river deltas where both the records of modern and ancient tidal processes can be studied. A ∼5 m.y./>10-km-thick succession on the island of Trinidad contains remnants of paleo-Orinoco deltaic deposition preserving both tide- and wave-influenced delta lobes within the same time intervals, just like the modern Orinoco Delta that has both wave-dominated and tidal-dominated lobes. The tide-influenced delta lobes and estuaries preserve some spectacular tidal bedding signals, including tidal rhythmites. The tidal record encoded within the tidal rhythmites is preserved well enough that the primary tidal constituents responsible for the tidal currents that deposited the rhythmic facies can be inferred.
Lower to upper Pliocene tidal rhythmites were examined in two main paleo-Orinoco sub-environments: (1) estuarine and delta lobe deposits of Morne L’Enfer Formation at Erin Bay, and (2) abandoned tidal channels associated with tide-influenced delta-front deposits from the Telemaque Sandstone Member of the Manzanilla Formation at Matura Bay. Both wave- and river-current signals are also present in most of the study areas.
Tidal constituent analysis of unusually well-preserved paleo-Orinoco tidal rhythmites reveals a hierarchy of tidal signals that include semidiurnal, diurnal, fortnightly (neap−spring), monthly (perigee−apogee), semi-yearly, and possibly seasonal and yearly cycles that span thickness intervals ranging from millimeters to meters.
The tidal constituents were dominated by, in decreasing importance, M2, S2, and likely K1 rather than O1. The modern tidal data clearly show that K1 is more important in terms of tide-generating potential than O1, as was likely so in the Pliocene. In both the rock and modern records, N2 is more significant than O1, P1, and K2 in terms of tide-generating potential. The comparison between the constituent analysis of the ancient tidal record and the modern tidal measurements reveals their similarities in tidal patterns and constituent types. From this, we deduce that the tidal constituents responsible for the Pliocene Orinoco Delta tides were mixed semidiurnal tidal cycles similar to those found today in Trinidad (Atlantic type of synodically dominated) rather than the Caribbean (tropically dominated) type.