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Mass flow deposits on a mid-Tertiary carbonate shelf, southern New Zealand
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
Summary
Sheet-like and channel-filling conglomerates and pebbly biomicrudites occur within a sequence of cross-stratified shallow-water bioclastic limestones, the Forest Hill Formation of Late Oligocene to Early Miocene age. The largest channel, 50 m wide, 9 m deep, and at least 1.2 km long, is infilled with four separate conglomerate units of pebble- to boulder-sized limestone lithoclasts in a sparse muddy matrix (biomicrudite). Both the conglomerates and associated pebbly biomicrudites possess features characteristic of high concentration mass flows - both of laminar flow (preferred clast orientation, inverse grading or massive bedding) and of turbulent flow (normal coarse-tail or distribution grading and stratification). Clast imbrication (a- or b-axes) is suggestive of gradual deposition. Some flows travelled far enough to allow both vertical and horizontal differentiation of the coarse sediment. Facies models which have been proposed for conglomerates of deep water (turbidite) association can also be applied to the small-scale neritic conglomerates. Formation and remobilisation of such coarse grained facies in a shelf setting is attributed to eustatic sea-level changes and/or to local tectonism.
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