Marine & Environmental Sciences Faculty Articles
Patterns of Sedimentation In the Contemporary Red Sea As An Analog for Ancient Carbonates In Rift Settings
ResearcherID
B-8552-2013
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Journal of Sedimentary Research
ISSN
1527-1404
Publication Date
11-2012
Abstract
Patterns of sedimentation in the Red Sea offer a contemporary analog for carbonate deposition in marine rift settings. Covering 20° of latitude, the sea is sufficiently long to display pronounced climate differences and the clear tropical waters support vigorous coral reef growth and associated production of carbonate sediment. Six focus areas within the Red Sea, each covering exactly 1,600 sq. km, illustrate the variability of spatial patterns in reefal and other carbonates in this rift setting. Five of the focus areas are located on a north–south transect along the western margin of the sea: (1) Gubal Straits (Egypt), (2) Shalatayn (Egypt), (3) Trinkitat (Sudan), (4) Dahlak (Eritrea), and (5) Halib (Eritrea); and one is from the eastern margin: (6) Farasan Banks (Saudi Arabia). Using Landsat imagery, water depth and two marine facies classes, “reefal frameworks” and “sediments,” were mapped. Lumping these two classes define “carbonate bodies” that were analyzed for trends in orientation, relation to local fault networks, and size-frequency distribution. Fault lineaments digitized from the literature are closely related to the orientation of carbonate bodies with areas exceeding 5 sq. km. Smaller bodies do not preferentially align with fault trends. Water depth and the occurrence of reefal frameworks and sediments for the six focus areas are not systematically related. Used as an analog, these data from the contemporary Red Sea may provide insight into the orientation and scale of accumulation of carbonates in subsurface marine rift settings.
DOI
10.2110/jsr.2012.77
Volume
82
Issue
11
First Page
859
Last Page
870
NSUWorks Citation
Samuel J. Purkis, Paul Mitch Harris, and James Ellis. 2012. Patterns of Sedimentation In the Contemporary Red Sea As An Analog for Ancient Carbonates In Rift Settings .Journal of Sedimentary Research , (11) : 859 -870. https://nsuworks.nova.edu/occ_facarticles/261.
Comments
©2012, SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology)