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Long-eccentricity regulated climate control on fluvial incision and aggradation in the Palaeocene of north-eastern Montana (USA)
Authors:Lars J Noorbergen  Antonio Turtu  Klaudia F Kuiper  Cornelis Kasse  Sverre van Ginneken  Mark J Dekkers  Wout Krijgsman  Hemmo A Abels  Frederik J Hilgen
Institution:1. Department of Earth Sciences, VU University Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1085, Amsterdam, 1081 HV The Netherlands;2. Department of Earth Sciences, Utrecht University, Princetonlaan 8a, Utrecht, 3584 CB The Netherlands;3. Department of Geosciences and Engineering, Delft University of Technology, Stevinweg 1, Delft, 2628 CN The Netherlands
Abstract:Aggradation and fluvial incision controlled by downstream base-level changes at timescales of 10 to 500 kyr is incorporated in classic sequence stratigraphic models. However, upstream climate control on sediment supply and discharge variability causes fluvial incision and aggradation as well. Orbital forcing often regulates climate change at 10 to 500 kyr timescales while tectonic processes such as flexural (un)loading exert a dominant control at timescales longer than 500 kyr. It remains challenging to attribute fluvial incision and aggradation to upstream or downstream processes or disentangle allogenic from autogenic forcing, because time control is mostly limited in fluvial successions. The Palaeocene outcrops of the fluvial Lebo Shale Member in north-eastern Montana (Williston Basin, USA) constitute an exception. This study uses a distinctive tephra layer and two geomagnetic polarity reversals to create a 15 km long chronostratigraphic framework based on the correlation of twelve sections. Three aggradation–incision sequences are identified with durations of approximately 400 kyr, suggesting a relation with long-eccentricity. This age control further reveals that incision occurred during the approach of – or during – a 405 kyr long-eccentricity minimum. A long-term relaxation of the hydrological cycle related to such an orbital phasing potentially exerts an upstream climate control on river incision. Upstream, an expanding vegetation cover is expected because of an increasingly constant moisture supply to source areas. Entrapping by vegetation led to a significantly reduced sediment supply relative to discharge, especially at times of low evapotranspiration. Hence, high discharges resulted in incision. This study assesses the long-eccentricity regulated climate control on fluvial aggradation and incision in a new aggradation–incision sequence model.
Keywords:Aggradation  climate change  fluvial stratigraphy  hiatuses  incision  long-eccentricity cycle  magnetostratigraphic correlation  tephrostratigraphic correlation
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