|
Bedding
Plane
Bedset
Depositional
Surface
Lamina
Laminaset
Niels
Steensen
Stacking
Patterns
Trajectory

William
Smith
|
These are commonly layers of
sedimentary rock separated by breaks called bedding planes. The sedimentary
"bed" is the basic unit,or fundamental building block of stratigraphy
(Campbell, 1967). The lithologic composition of beds, their geometry,
their trajectory, stacking patterns and hierarchies are used to interpret
their depositional setting. Beds may signal a global process that acted
over ten's of thousand of years or may be very local products of
"events" that acted over a matter of hours or days (Einsele
et al, 1991).


In the 16th century Niels Steensen (1669) recognized that sedimentary
rocks were:
• Formed of layers or strata
• These over lie on another in the order they accumulated
• Were close to horizontal at deposition
• Have a lateral continuity that pinches out at the margin of a
depositional basin.
Steno, as he was known in the Medici Court, made these critical geological
observations in "De solido intra solidum naturaliter contento
dissertationis prodromus". He inspired the use of bedding to
map and interpret sedimentary rocks. As a result Jean-Etienne Guettard
used beds, as did Georges Cuvier, in their mapping in France, and William
Smith (1815) when mapping the sedimentary strata of England on the basis
of the lithology, "erosional" breaks, and the sequential order
the fossil content of beds. Undoubtedly the recognition of beds must have
had earlier origins, so even in the 5th century BC contemporaries of Pythagoras
were aware of layered accumulation of sediment found in the exposed portions
of the Earth's crust (Lyell, 1830).
In 1953 McKee and Weir defined
a ‘bed' as a laterally traceable, three-dimensional rock body
of relatively uniform physical, chemical/mineralogical, and biological
composition distinguishable from rock above and below. Bed size was seen
to range from very thin-bedded 1 cm to very thick-bedded, 1 m (McKee and
Weir, 1953, Ingram, 1954).
Most sedimentary stratigraphers
probably concur with McKee and Weir's (1953) definition and like
Boggs (2001) attribute the origin of the thickness and composition of
individual beds to nearly constant physical, chemical, and biological
conditions in the depositional setting. However a critical property of
beds, whose origins are often enigmatic, is the bedding plane that separates
beds from each other with sharply defined upper and lower surfaces
So a bed can be considered
to be a relatively conformable succession of genetically related sedimentary
materials, laminae or laminasets bounded by surfaces (called bedding planes
or surfaces) of erosion, non-deposition or their correlative conformities.
Bounding surfaces form rapidly (minutes to years) and separate all younger
strata from all other strata over the extent of the surface. The time
represented by bedding planes probably greater than time represented by
beds (AAPG Methods in Exploration 7, 1990).
Useful
References
Boggs, S. Jr.,
2001, Principles of sedimentology and stratigraphy 3rd. ed. Prentice-Hall,
Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: 726 p.
Campbell C. V., 1979, Lamiae, laminaset, bed and bedset: Sedimentology
v8, p7-26
Ingram, R.L., 1954, Terminology for the thickness of stratification and
parting units in sedimentary rocks. Geol. Soc. Bulletin, 65: 937-938.
Einsele G., Ricken W., and Seilacher A., (editors), 1991, "Cycles
and events in stratigraphy", Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg,
New York 1991. 955p.
Lyell, C., 1830, Principles of Geology volume 1, pp 511
McKee, E.D., and Weir, G.W., 1953, Terminology for stratification and
cross-stratification in sedimentary rocks. Geol. Soc. America Bulletin,
64(4): 381-389.
Schlager, W., 2004, Fractal nature of stratigraphic sequences. Geology,
32(3): 185-188.
Steno, N, (alias Nils Steno, Niels Stensen, and Nicolai Stenonis) 1669, De Solido Intra
Solidium Naturaliter Contento Dissertationis Prodromus: Florence, Italy, Library of
Grand Duke Ferdinand II, - V. iv, 131 p. English version: Stensen, Niels 1671, The
prodromus to a dissertation concerning solids naturally contained within solids. J.
Winter, London, 112 p.
|