“…Two‐dimensional dip‐parallel sections have been widely used in clinoform trajectory analysis (Helland‐Hansen & Hampson, ; Henriksen, Hampson, Helland‐Hansen, Johannessen, & Steel, ; Steel & Olsen, ), to infer changes in relative sea‐level and to predict the timing of coarse‐grained sediment delivery to deep water. Clinoform trajectory analysis, however, tends to underplay the role of dominant process regime and along‐strike variability in basin margin physiography (Dixon et al., ; Jones, Hodgson, & Flint, ), which limits predictability in sediment character and partitioning between the shelf, slope and basin floor segments (Cosgrove, Hodgson, Poyatos‐Moré, Mountney, & McCaffrey, ; Prather et al., ). Modern and subsurface studies demonstrate that along‐strike variability in coastal process regime and shelf morphology commonly results in a laterally variable stratigraphic record (Ainsworth, Vakarelov, & Nanson, ; Jones et al., ; Laugier & Plink‐Björklund, ; Madof, Harris, & Connell, ; Olariu, Carvajal, Olariu, & Steel, ; Sanchez, Fulthorpe, & Steel, ), which can also be a key control on the nature of the SERZ (Pyles & Slatt, ; Olariu & Steel, ; Dixon et al., ; Gomis‐Cartesio et al., ).…”