Aspects carbonate sedimentation in Indonesia
Year: 1976
Proceedings Title : Proc. Indon. Petrol. Assoc., 5th Ann. Conv., 1976
The PuIau Seribu in the western Java Sea are an excellent example of a modem patch reef province in Indonesia. Their growth patterns are influenced by their position on the northeast - southwest trending Seribu High and by the influence of the seasonal wind and current directions.Morphologically, they tend to be small, elongate reefal bodies varying in length from 50 metres to a kilometre or more. They are steep sided and separated by flat-bottomed, east-west channels. Their edges are characterised by prolific growths of living corals.Preliminary studies of their morphology and sediments have given xise to theories concerning their growfh, and have allowed the distinction of a number of physiographic zones and sedimentary facies. Particular attention has been paid to the skeletal components of the sediments in the various facies and it appears that they are almost all composed chiefly of coral and molluscan debris, with smaller proportions of echinoid, foraminiferal and algal material. While the primary influence on the growth of the reefs and the sediment distribution tends to be the predominant current direction, ecological and sedimentological observations have shown the importance of biological activity in the generation, reworking and redistribution of the sediments.The paheoecological significance of the observations to date is discussed in an attempt to bring out some features which will be useful in the interpretation of Neogene reefal bodies in Indonesia.
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