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Análisis de subsidencia de cuencas×Datación Geocronológica×Correlación Estratigráfica×
CampoGeocienciasGeocienciasGeociencias
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen197819021901
Autor originalMcKenzie and SclaterErnest Rutherford and Frederick SoddyAlbrecht Penck and Eduard Brückner
Tipotectono-sedimentary analysis pipelinetemporal constraint pipelinestratigraphic analysis pipeline
Fuente seminalSclater, J. G., & Christie, P. A. F. (1980). Continental stretching: An explanation of the post-mid-Cretaceous subsidence of the Central North Sea Basin. Journal of Geophysical Research, 85(B7), 3711–3739. DOI ↗Dickin, A. P. (2005). Radiogenic Isotope Geology (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. DOI ↗Catuneanu, O. (2002). Sequence Stratigraphy of Clastic Systems. Geological Association of Canada. link ↗
Aliastectonic subsidence, backstripping, thermal history analysisradiometric dating, isotopic dating, age determinationlithostratigraphic correlation, chronostratigraphic correlation, sequence correlation
Relacionados435
ResumenBasin subsidence analysis is the quantitative study of how sedimentary basins deepen over geological time, driven by tectonics, isostasy, and load. Formalized by McKenzie (1978) and Sclater and Christie (1980), this method reveals the mechanical causes of basin development, predicts subsurface temperature and pressure histories, and constrains petroleum generation. Analysis integrates well stratigraphy, seismic geometry, gravity data, and thermal models to reconstruct basin evolution.Geochronological dating is the determination of absolute ages of rocks and minerals using the decay of radioactive isotopes. Pioneered by Rutherford and Soddy (1902), this method provides numerical anchors for geological timescales and enables quantitative understanding of geological processes. Modern techniques (K-Ar, Rb-Sr, U-Pb, 40Ar/39Ar) span from recent to ancient events and are essential for calibrating relative chronologies and assessing rates of geological change.Stratigraphic correlation is the practice of identifying equivalent rock layers or chronostratigraphic units across space by tracing physical or chemical signatures. Rooted in 19th-century work on Alpine glacial sequences, this method was formalized in the 20th century by geologists like Vail who unified global sea-level change with depositional sequences. Correlation is foundational to basin-scale understanding of sediment transport, resource distribution, and paleoenvironmental change.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Basin Subsidence Analysis · Geochronological Dating · Stratigraphic Correlation. Recuperado el 2026-06-20 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare