2020
DOI: 10.31223/osf.io/8vgyj
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Discriminating stacked distributary channel from palaeovalley fill sand bodies in foreland basin settings

Abstract: Stacked fluvial distributary channel deposits and palaeovalley fills can form major, multi-storey sand bodies with similar thicknesses, and with lateral extents often greater than a single exposure. Consequently, they can be difficult to tell apart from one another using outcrop data. This study addresses this problem by quantitatively analysing the architecture of five stacked fluvial distributary channel deposits and two palaeovalley fills from the Pennsylvanian Pikeville and Hyden formations of the central … Show more

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“…In the case of Alvarez Ridge, the added observations significantly impacted the ultimate interpretation of channel evolutionary processes. Although this study presents a single example from deep-water channel deposits, it is conceivable, if not probable, that a UAV-SfM approach could reveal new perspectives of outcrops that characterise nearly any depositional and/or structural setting (Burnham et al, 2020).…”
Section: Dom Mappingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the case of Alvarez Ridge, the added observations significantly impacted the ultimate interpretation of channel evolutionary processes. Although this study presents a single example from deep-water channel deposits, it is conceivable, if not probable, that a UAV-SfM approach could reveal new perspectives of outcrops that characterise nearly any depositional and/or structural setting (Burnham et al, 2020).…”
Section: Dom Mappingmentioning
confidence: 99%