Lacustrine and fan‐delta sediments in syn‐rift lake basins

Abstract Lakes are sensitive indicators of the balance between accommodation and sediment supply, recording high‐resolution changes in palaeoenvironmental conditions. Long‐lived rift lake basins, however, are predominantly controlled by episodic accommodation changes and pronounced basinward facies...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Qianyou Wang, Yaohua Li, Hamed Sanei, Joe Gardner, Arka Rudra, James E. P. Utley, Richard H. Worden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-06-01
Series:The Depositional Record
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/dep2.70010
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850221113091555328
author Qianyou Wang
Yaohua Li
Hamed Sanei
Joe Gardner
Arka Rudra
James E. P. Utley
Richard H. Worden
author_facet Qianyou Wang
Yaohua Li
Hamed Sanei
Joe Gardner
Arka Rudra
James E. P. Utley
Richard H. Worden
author_sort Qianyou Wang
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Lakes are sensitive indicators of the balance between accommodation and sediment supply, recording high‐resolution changes in palaeoenvironmental conditions. Long‐lived rift lake basins, however, are predominantly controlled by episodic accommodation changes and pronounced basinward facies shifts, complicating the generalisation of tectonic and climatic controls on rift lake successions. This study proposes a sequence framework and depositional pattern for asymmetric half‐grabens in syn‐rift lake basins by characterising the lacustrine fan‐delta deposits of the Lower Cretaceous Shahezi Formation in the Songliao Basin. Detailed sedimentologic and petrographic analyses identified 24 lithofacies categorised into seven facies associations. A sequence stratigraphic framework was constructed to outline the tectono‐stratigraphic evolution during the syn‐rift phase. The results indicate that the syn‐rift Lishu palaeo‐lake is characterised by its relatively small size, steep slopes, poorly developed and siliciclastic‐dominant shoreline strata and significant input of allochthonous biodetritus. The syn‐rift deposits show a distinct threefold conglomerate–sandstone–mudstone motif, with a complete cycle comprising a prolonged retrogradational phase (LST and TST) and a brief progradational phase (HST). Basin‐bounding faults accelerated hinterland erosion and increased sediment feeder system slopes by rotating hangingwall blocks; consequently, rapid sediment transport and localised gravitational collapse caused the common occurrence of soft‐sediment deformation structures and sublacustrine fan conglomerates. The substantial increase in accommodation space, resulting from fault‐generated subsidence, triggered lake expansion and further contributed to the development of transgressive system tracts and continuous mudstone deposition. These mudstones, rich in terrigenous organic matter and allochthonous fossils, correlate with carbonaceous mudstones, coals and conglomeratic sandstones in proximal overfilled sections, indicating a dynamic interplay between fan delta progradation and Lake Shoreline transgressions. This study proposes a depositional model within a sequence stratigraphic framework for non‐marine sediment accumulation in asymmetric half‐grabens bounded by active faults. The findings offer insights that complement existing models developed for marine rift systems.
format Article
id doaj-art-d74da306bdba4dc7948bd2e4aca08cab
institution OA Journals
issn 2055-4877
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series The Depositional Record
spelling doaj-art-d74da306bdba4dc7948bd2e4aca08cab2025-08-20T02:06:49ZengWileyThe Depositional Record2055-48772025-06-0111385789210.1002/dep2.70010Lacustrine and fan‐delta sediments in syn‐rift lake basinsQianyou Wang0Yaohua Li1Hamed Sanei2Joe Gardner3Arka Rudra4James E. P. Utley5Richard H. Worden6Department of Earth, Ocean and Ecological Sciences University of Liverpool Liverpool UKOil and Gas Survey China Geological Survey Beijing ChinaLithospheric Organic Carbon (L.O.C.) Group, Department of Geoscience Aarhus University Aarhus DenmarkDepartment of Earth, Ocean and Ecological Sciences University of Liverpool Liverpool UKLithospheric Organic Carbon (L.O.C.) Group, Department of Geoscience Aarhus University Aarhus DenmarkDepartment of Earth, Ocean and Ecological Sciences University of Liverpool Liverpool UKDepartment of Earth, Ocean and Ecological Sciences University of Liverpool Liverpool UKAbstract Lakes are sensitive indicators of the balance between accommodation and sediment supply, recording high‐resolution changes in palaeoenvironmental conditions. Long‐lived rift lake basins, however, are predominantly controlled by episodic accommodation changes and pronounced basinward facies shifts, complicating the generalisation of tectonic and climatic controls on rift lake successions. This study proposes a sequence framework and depositional pattern for asymmetric half‐grabens in syn‐rift lake basins by characterising the lacustrine fan‐delta deposits of the Lower Cretaceous Shahezi Formation in the Songliao Basin. Detailed sedimentologic and petrographic analyses identified 24 lithofacies categorised into seven facies associations. A sequence stratigraphic framework was constructed to outline the tectono‐stratigraphic evolution during the syn‐rift phase. The results indicate that the syn‐rift Lishu palaeo‐lake is characterised by its relatively small size, steep slopes, poorly developed and siliciclastic‐dominant shoreline strata and significant input of allochthonous biodetritus. The syn‐rift deposits show a distinct threefold conglomerate–sandstone–mudstone motif, with a complete cycle comprising a prolonged retrogradational phase (LST and TST) and a brief progradational phase (HST). Basin‐bounding faults accelerated hinterland erosion and increased sediment feeder system slopes by rotating hangingwall blocks; consequently, rapid sediment transport and localised gravitational collapse caused the common occurrence of soft‐sediment deformation structures and sublacustrine fan conglomerates. The substantial increase in accommodation space, resulting from fault‐generated subsidence, triggered lake expansion and further contributed to the development of transgressive system tracts and continuous mudstone deposition. These mudstones, rich in terrigenous organic matter and allochthonous fossils, correlate with carbonaceous mudstones, coals and conglomeratic sandstones in proximal overfilled sections, indicating a dynamic interplay between fan delta progradation and Lake Shoreline transgressions. This study proposes a depositional model within a sequence stratigraphic framework for non‐marine sediment accumulation in asymmetric half‐grabens bounded by active faults. The findings offer insights that complement existing models developed for marine rift systems.https://doi.org/10.1002/dep2.70010Cretaceousfan deltahalf‐grabenlakemudstonerift basin
spellingShingle Qianyou Wang
Yaohua Li
Hamed Sanei
Joe Gardner
Arka Rudra
James E. P. Utley
Richard H. Worden
Lacustrine and fan‐delta sediments in syn‐rift lake basins
The Depositional Record
Cretaceous
fan delta
half‐graben
lake
mudstone
rift basin
title Lacustrine and fan‐delta sediments in syn‐rift lake basins
title_full Lacustrine and fan‐delta sediments in syn‐rift lake basins
title_fullStr Lacustrine and fan‐delta sediments in syn‐rift lake basins
title_full_unstemmed Lacustrine and fan‐delta sediments in syn‐rift lake basins
title_short Lacustrine and fan‐delta sediments in syn‐rift lake basins
title_sort lacustrine and fan delta sediments in syn rift lake basins
topic Cretaceous
fan delta
half‐graben
lake
mudstone
rift basin
url https://doi.org/10.1002/dep2.70010
work_keys_str_mv AT qianyouwang lacustrineandfandeltasedimentsinsynriftlakebasins
AT yaohuali lacustrineandfandeltasedimentsinsynriftlakebasins
AT hamedsanei lacustrineandfandeltasedimentsinsynriftlakebasins
AT joegardner lacustrineandfandeltasedimentsinsynriftlakebasins
AT arkarudra lacustrineandfandeltasedimentsinsynriftlakebasins
AT jameseputley lacustrineandfandeltasedimentsinsynriftlakebasins
AT richardhworden lacustrineandfandeltasedimentsinsynriftlakebasins