Provenance and Sedimentary Environments
The composition and texture of sediment record both its source, or provenance, and the environment in which it was deposited.
Definition
The study of the source areas and tectonic settings from which detritus is derived and of the depositional environments in which sediment accumulates, inferred from rock composition, texture, and structures.
Scope
This topic covers provenance analysis, the use of framework grain composition, heavy minerals, and detrital geochronology to identify source rocks and tectonic setting, alongside the recognition of depositional environments, fluvial, deltaic, shoreline, deep marine, eolian, and others, from sedimentary structures, texture, and associations. It links sediment composition to source and setting.
Core questions
- How does sandstone composition reveal the tectonic setting of its source?
- What do heavy minerals and detrital ages indicate about provenance?
- How are depositional environments recognized in the rock record?
- How do source and environment jointly shape sediment character?
Key theories
- Provenance from sandstone composition
- Dickinson and Suczek showed that the proportions of quartz, feldspar, and lithic fragments in sandstones cluster according to tectonic setting, continental block, magmatic arc, or recycled orogen, making framework composition a tectonic discriminator.
- Environmental interpretation of facies
- Characteristic combinations of sedimentary structures, textures, geometry, and fossils define facies that are diagnostic of specific depositional environments, allowing ancient settings to be reconstructed from the rock record.
Clinical relevance
Provenance and environmental analysis reconstruct paleogeography and the tectonic evolution of basins, guide exploration by predicting reservoir and source-rock distribution, and link the sedimentary record to mountain-building and erosion history.
History
Provenance studies advanced from early heavy-mineral analysis to the plate-tectonic framework of Dickinson and Suczek in 1979, which tied sandstone composition to tectonic setting; facies analysis developed in parallel into a systematic method for reading depositional environments.
Key figures
- William R. Dickinson
- Francis J. Pettijohn
- Maurice E. Tucker
Related topics
Seminal works
- dickinson1979
- boggs2009
- tucker2001
Frequently asked questions
- What are heavy minerals used for in provenance studies?
- Dense accessory minerals such as zircon, tourmaline, and rutile resist weathering and are diagnostic of particular source rocks, so their assemblages help identify where sediment came from.
- How can one tell the depositional environment of an ancient rock?
- By interpreting sedimentary structures (such as cross-bedding or ripple marks), grain texture, geometry, and fossil content, which together form facies diagnostic of environments like rivers, beaches, or deep sea.