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00:00 Yeah. OK. Uh We're gonna about estuaries. Um The um list

00:09 uh useful readings is long. Uh , this is for your reference and

00:14 everything is on the, the uh uh fold in the reading folder and

00:21 things that have included or not. It's kind of hard to, to

00:26 what to push. There's been a of literature done in the last few

00:31 . Uh But let's look for a at this diagram we've seen before and

00:37 , it's arguably it tries to differentiate depositional environments associated with transgressive settings and

00:47 settings. And when we do that we look at uh the transgressive

00:54 Well, let's see, we've done planes, barrier islands, tidal

00:58 And so it leaves estuary. So we're gonna be doing that, but

01:02 would remind you that no strand planes in both a, a uh regressive

01:10 transgressive setting. And in fact, our deltas and, and other uh

01:18 uh uh estuaries of sorts. So take this diagram literally. Uh because

01:24 , one of the things that I you, you get from these lectures

01:29 the types of depositional systems associated with and regressive settings doesn't necessarily mean uh

01:40 and lowering sea level. OK. there we can get regressions during rising

01:46 level, we can get transgressions during sea level. All depending on the

01:52 amount of accumulation space sediment supply. we're gonna see different ways that we

01:58 transform or change these uh depositional Now, it's useful to know what

02:05 mean by an estuary. Uh You think of it as uh an area

02:10 uh basically transitional uh salinity, brackish in essence, or you could think

02:17 it with tidal influence. Uh how upstream there's a tidal influence uh or

02:24 could do on the basis of, . Uh Basically combining the processes and

02:31 result in geological faces uh into different . And that is, of

02:36 uh more of a geological approach. so I'll be using that having said

02:42 , let me pause just for a . I was an expert witness in

02:45 trial where it had to do with subsidence and whether or not um a

02:56 group was liable for uh the loss property due to subsidence in a,

03:05 I would say, a fluvial OK. Uh Well, it turns

03:10 that I was using the geological but finally, the, the legal

03:19 is based on tidal influence. And this was on the San Center River

03:26 there's a tidal imprint all the way to lake Houston. So the San

03:32 rivers all the way to Lake Houston a quote estuary. Now, no

03:38 would define it that way. it's unidirectional currents, there's no reversal

03:45 flow. There's no effect of tides sedimentation. But from a legal point

03:53 view, uh it's, and just I decide, my client, I

03:58 for a lost case. Ok. , here we've got, um,

04:07 to like me, uh, get pen uh salinity. Oops, salinity

04:19 . That would be one definition of word upstream. A little more.

04:23 could be a lot more uh in san river tidal influence. That would

04:28 another definition. But we're going to . Yes. And is more or

04:37 coincident with the salinity. But it's , it's where the title processes end

04:45 it's easier to visualize here. Uh are really marine processes. Here is

04:54 and that could be waves and, tides. Uh We've got the fluvial

05:01 getting less and less. And so when they begin to, to uh

05:08 , that's the beginning of the estuary the estuary ends when it's virtually all

05:15 and in between, we've got an , central and outer estuary depending on

05:21 or not they're sub equal, mixed in this case, marine dominated or

05:26 dominated. Now, Galveston Bay is big estuary. It's one of the

05:31 national uh estuaries. Uh And I've modified a little bit to kind

05:37 focus on some of the set of . Um The thing about where the

05:42 is coming from, but maybe more is to look at the type of

05:48 in Galveston Bay. And so basically about sand and mud. Uh the

05:59 uh is here and that's gonna be and title delta. It's gonna be

06:10 here with wash over fans and blood delta. And then there's a little

06:17 of sand fringing the estuary and that's to uh erosion on the backs.

06:23 you don't see much is sand in deltas. And the reason for that

06:28 these deltas have been largely um submerged to subsidence and sediment reduced due to

06:38 . Ok. So, uh so mud in the central part.

06:45 So let's see what uh that would like. Uh You can kind of

06:49 this for a night. Now, We'll, we'll talk about this

06:53 but look at where the sand was and suggestion is, there's a

07:02 there is a bay head delta here a central basin, ok. The

07:07 basin is gonna have muds and it's transition for waves at least. Or

07:15 wave impact cuts is uh is very much how far into the

07:24 the wave dominant estuary, the sand , it's either gonna be a wash

07:28 fan or an tidal delta. So it's not gonna go very

07:33 Uh That sand and mud will extend on how big the bay delta is

07:44 the central basin kind of depends on size of the basin. So what

07:48 see here is that they had the wash overs and flood de deltas

07:55 this large central base, ok. this this particular estuary, this wave

08:03 estuary of Galveston Bay formed was initiated the rise and high standard sea

08:14 Now, similar estuaries were in existence in the Colorado where in the Brazos

08:22 just south of us, but there's estuary today. The reason is those

08:27 fill. This one has not. we could anticipate what would happen if

08:35 San Center River and Trinity River could Galveston Bay. And, and that's

08:43 we're visualizing here. That is the of filling the bay well in cross

08:52 and in um mat view. And this is Galveston today, Galveston's basically

08:58 an unfilled bay, an unfilled OK. Now, it's pretty easy

09:05 imagine the delta filling the bay, ? Until such time is, is

09:14 filled. Now, the one exception that I would point out here is

09:22 the bay is also filling by the landward migration of the estuary. I

09:31 , I'm sorry, of the OK. Uh That's what's shown

09:36 OK. And so the landward migrating and the seaward migrating delta merge uh

09:47 form a waved dominated delta basically Now, we actually, that doesn't

09:56 to happen that way. Um You have this barrier island continued to be

10:05 or even pro greedy. In that's what happened to Galveston. Galveston

10:11 It even though it did not have sediment passing from the bay head delta

10:20 uh the marine environment. And the for that is the bay was too

10:26 . And so the sediment that was , allowing the barrier island galaxy to

10:33 was coming in from lands shore from longshore drift. So, erosion of

10:38 Headlands adjacent headlands. OK. So here's the bay, here's the barrier

10:50 is gonna allow the barrier to grow as the delta can grow as

10:59 Ok. So those are two very scenarios of filling a waved dominated delta

11:06 on the relative uh amount and source sediment to the barrier island. Does

11:13 barrier migrate and fill in the inland the marine side or does it migrate

11:19 ? And the estuary has to be filled from the delta. Now,

11:26 is a cross section of what might . Ok. And um it's an

11:32 cross section to spend some time Ok. Um Down on the

11:40 we have what is in essence, entrenched valley base and as sea level

11:47 to entrench, I mean, it to rise, it's gonna fill to

11:53 extent. OK. And it's gonna from pluvial to urine and look what

12:02 here, the rev service. So is a transgressive barrier island that's deviling

12:15 estuary. Ok. And what's happening the bay where the bay, the

12:22 valley is getting filled with sets. as sea level rises, that bay

12:30 farther and farther inland until at some , maximum transgression of the bay

12:39 And at that point, as sea slows down and river input is stable

12:45 constant yet the river and more the bay had delta begins to

12:52 And so that's what's happening here. notice at this point here, the

13:01 delta has filled the bay, there's more bay or set up. And

13:08 look what happens here that transgressive a transgressive barrier islands has become a

13:19 waved dominated delta. OK. this shows it in a little more

13:29 in some ways, more simplified in . I want you to look,

13:33 of all at that rave surface, ? That rave surface is truncating the

13:41 and the bay settles and what do have in a bay that's not eroded

13:47 . Things that are either extend too inland to be eroded like a wash

13:53 fan or tidal deltas or title So that's what's shown in here.

14:01 are little uh titled inlet fills and wash overs and uh subtitle uh uh

14:10 overs and uh flood tidal deltas, ? Uh Notice this actually includes the

14:18 stand here when that entrenched valley hit stand. You then had a low

14:25 delta. And now we have a standard delta. Yeah. And this

14:31 kind of dividing it uh to a the maximum flooding service representing the transgression

14:42 with transgressive deposits and regressive deposits. also most of the bay fill is

14:53 filled during the transgression. Most of delta fills or more specifically, uh

15:01 the marine delta Phil is during the stand or tropic sea level.

15:08 there's a lot of erosion that's going here and I'm, it, it

15:11 a little confusing. I'm just gonna out 2 uh Maybe three erosional

15:20 One is the entrenched valley, that's a sequence boundary. It is the

15:29 of the valley. The 2nd 1 the rave of surface that is the

15:37 formed during rising sea level and wave . That's during the transgressive system.

15:46 , there are some little erosional surfaces are due to lateral migration of that

16:02 . So there's an erosional surface at base of the title. It doesn't

16:08 very far. OK. But it's to show you erosion and deposition as

16:13 . So that's what is called a that surface. OK. So there's

16:22 , a good example with the Tiber in Delta where they have a lot

16:26 control on the cross section from. , so this is our hypothetical and

16:36 is the reality. OK. So wanna look at this cross section in

16:41 little more detail. OK? And that here is that basal sequence boundary

16:53 . I'm sorry um valley erosional OK. Here is that wave of

17:05 as it's coming in and it's truncating the bay fill. Uh But you

17:14 see a little bit of wash over that are formed during that, that

17:22 preserved, formed and preserved during the transgression. Eventually the delta plane begins

17:34 fill the bay and now we're getting new delta. It's a high stand

17:46 . OK. So if we looked a vertical section right here, we

17:53 this erosional surface which is the valley , we see the fluvial deposits,

18:00 see the bay deposits, oops and we began to see the pro

18:13 We, in this case, wave delta. OK. With another erosional

18:20 here is the wave of the So again, you can look at

18:27 and see if you can work out these boundaries are in here.

18:37 And you can do that on your . Now, if we were to

18:41 at that in cross section right OK? And before the bay is

18:48 , I guess, really better say right about here, might look something

18:53 this. This is, in the cross section of the Buried Valley

18:59 around Galveston Island. This on the is Galveston Island. On the right

19:03 Bal, the peninsula in the middle b of the roads. It,

19:07 what we see lower part flu transgressed flooded valley fill estuary and then pro

19:21 into and separating the S S U ware from the marine environment, the

19:28 bar and tidal sands. OK. that's what you would see here.

19:40 . I got it here. I think you can also imagine if

19:47 took a cross section of the Valley in different places, it's gonna look

19:53 different, but it's not that hard visualize what they would be like if

20:00 can visualize this kind of uh sequence , this this wave dominated face track

20:09 time. OK. Now we talked waved dominated deltas, let's and waved

20:18 environments. And we're talking about barrier as well to tide dominated settings where

20:25 gonna talk about estuaries and tidal Well, we've already talked about tidal

20:31 . So let's move over laterally. at those tide dominated estuaries. So

20:37 we are down here. OK. let's look at this like we did

20:45 waved dominated delta. Yeah. Uh , we have the decrease in the

20:54 of fluvial currents and sediment. And here though the marine influence actually increases

21:05 decreases with time. So the upper is pretty much like we saw

21:15 But now there's an increase and the energy as we move into this funnel

21:27 , we talked about that on a scale. We talked about the North

21:33 , the German Light. So we're that wedge, a wave of tides

21:41 they're getting higher. OK. the amount of notice here we've got

21:50 and you also get some waves but much. OK. So this is

21:56 tidal influence. Tidal maximum is right here. We have convergence.

22:12 bidirectional river flow, blood dominated versus . This is where you get

22:23 a huge amount of suspended setup. ? Um And this has important implications

22:33 we'll talk about a little more with to fluid muds. But basically,

22:38 is the zone of sediment convergence. . If we look at the fluvial

22:46 , they're still getting increasingly i impacted tides. And so as we go

22:53 upstream to downstream, we're seeing more more tidal influence. We're getting inclined

23:02 strata that we talked about earlier except , instead of being in that little

23:09 creek, it's in that tidally influenced Chin. So just here's a I

23:19 like the uh example zone of bed convergent. This is where most of

23:24 sedimentation occurs where most of the suspended is concentrated. You get pluvial dominated

23:40 , oddly dominated here. OK. you begin to see this pattern.

23:48 these V shaped tidal deltas with elongated bars rating upstream into this highly meandering

24:01 in which most of the settlement, bed load and mud are being

24:08 Now let me give an example of uh permian gas field in Australia that

24:16 illustrates both these faes components and their properties. OK. And in

24:24 we're gonna look at the petrol petrol . It's a gas field in offshore

24:32 . Ok. And I'm not gonna this, it just, uh,

24:37 have those in the notes but it you something about, uh, the

24:41 of, um, performance is about half a billion barrels of reserve.

24:48 , barrels equivalent, um, of petroleum is got about or condensates

24:56 four billion barrels of oil equivalent for . Ok. Uh, with peril

25:05 up to 2.5 to 6. So here it is geographically in this

25:10 line that we see here, that's shoreline during the mayo. OK.

25:16 so what we see is that during MCE, there were tie dominated deltas

25:29 this area here in wave dominated deltas strand place elsewhere. So this is

25:39 that wave dominated delta looked like. the tidal flats give us our fining

25:46 sequence. We've done that to The tidal sand bars. Now,

25:51 really a kind of a new, , we talked a little bit about

25:55 sand bars as associated with lower tidal flats and just offshore. But now

26:01 talking about these linear tidal sand bars are filling the estuary, OK?

26:10 they're coarsening upward. And if we at them in a little more

26:14 uh we see that this is the of the uh sandbar. Uh It's

26:22 different faces that's basically uh coarsening Uh It's clean, a little more

26:32 , not quite as clean to hetero bedding with interbedded mud and sand stuff

26:41 here. We've got interbedded, uh lithic betting that's actually forming on the

26:47 bottoms between the channels. Ok. The next two slides are for you

26:53 look at on your own. Uh about the type of sedimentary structures within

26:59 face and some more details about the , etcetera. Again, that uh

27:06 wait until you have time. What's to note right now is that when

27:12 look at the permeability and ferocity, reservoirs are sitting up in this area

27:22 which are mainly type one and type um Species, species two A or

27:32 B maybe. This is where your porosity and permeability and take a look

27:43 the difference between this say type one up here in this type for sitting

27:55 down here. OK. You've got complete loss of permeability and that loss

28:03 due to for cement. Why didn't lose it here? Because you had

28:11 digenetic chloride Cody over the graves. just as we saw in the Norfolk

28:19 with the Olean reservoirs where under certain you were able to preserve and or

28:29 the chloride coatings and therefore inhibit for . There were certain conditions that were

28:39 to the formation and preservation of chloride in the estuary as well. So

28:49 estuary actually evolved through time during a stand. It was a wave dominated

29:02 . OK? And even during the in sea level, it was a

29:09 dominated estuary. The problem is you good sands, clean sands, but

29:19 were filled with or cement as The estuary evolved from a wave to

29:28 tide dominated estuary. You've got a presence of the clay coatings which allowed

29:38 permeability uh to, To these depths actually pro abilities were up to 25

29:46 100. Now, there was a study to just compare that interpretation with

29:57 reservoir study and is of the uh in France. And it's got pluvial

30:07 delta, uh central basin, outer . Now this is a wave dominated

30:16 estuary. But when you begin to at the, I'm sorry, uh

30:22 , it's a tie dominated estuary, very elongated. There's no real barrier

30:29 here. It's mainly linear bars. if you look at the upper bar

30:41 of the bar, uh you get clean sand. When you look at

30:51 base of the bar and the between , you get a lot of,

30:58 yeah, the trid uh muds, ? And if you look at

31:11 where the best most well sorted sand it at the top here?

31:19 Um And I'm gonna skip this a bit except to say that when you

31:26 at the composition of the title from top to bottom and from inner

31:48 this was the inner one from inner estuary to or the outer estuary down

31:54 , the inner estuary, which is . OK. You, you see

32:01 differences and notice down in here, a lot of lithic fragments and mica

32:08 the like and some clays that you get in the upper part.

32:16 I'm not gonna discuss these except these the finding upward sequences that we saw

32:24 those title channels. Instead, let just summarize and, and again,

32:29 is for you to read at your . But what was the case with

32:33 Jerome as well as with the Petro ? The Jeron tidal bars and the

32:42 reservoirs is the best reservoir quality to with is in the outer este

32:50 And more specifically at the top, have the least amount of clay.

32:59 they tried to clay and they had most amount of clay coatings. So

33:05 is an ideal initial conditions for the of reservoirs. But as we're gonna

33:15 in just a moment, the problem you need to preserve the top of

33:24 . They try to bars and the of these kind of these linear

33:33 the top of linear tidal bars are preserved during transgressions and they are not

33:42 well preserved during regressions. I'll explain in a moment. But what that

33:48 is that you're best reservoir qualities are to be underneath that clay seal representing

33:59 the transgression. So they're gonna be lower parts of these or the the

34:10 linear bars. Ok. Not the linear. Yeah. Is like

34:43 is that the start of the or is it? OK. Uh

34:50 , the question was uh do the begin to be preserved during the

35:00 Um I'm actually gonna talk much more that when I talk about shelf settings

35:05 . But uh certainly as a our model is that we tend to

35:11 shales offshore grading into sandstones onshore. during a transgression, yes, we

35:17 get more and more sand, more more us. Ok. More and

35:22 mud rocks. Um The there's also an individual faces though kind of lateral

35:34 between shale and sand. So, example, with the um your second

35:45 if we did. So if we

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