Late Pleistocene-Holocene sedimentary evolution in the coastal zone of the Red River Delta

Heliyon. 2021 Jan 19;7(1):e05872. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e05872. eCollection 2021 Jan.

Abstract

The Red River Delta is considered one of the largest megadelta systems in Asia. The formation of this delta has been controlled by the continent-ocean interaction and sea-level fluctuation during the Cenozoic. In this study, we present a new sequence stratigraphic framework of the Red River Delta based on borehole lithofacies analysis and high resolution seismic data. The Late Pleistocene-Holocene sediments in the coastal zone of the Red River Delta were subdivided into three systems tracts: (1) the lowstand systems tract (LST) is characterized by a Late Pleistocene alluvial silty sand facies complex (arLSTQ1 3b); (2) the transgressive systems tract (TST) is illustrated by the coastal marsh facies complex and the lagoonal greenish-gray clay facies of Early-Middle Holocene (amt, mtTSTQ2 1-2); and (3) the highstand systems tract (HST) is composed of the Middle-Late Holocene deltaic clayish silt facies complex (amhHSTQ2 2-3). The boundaries between these three systems tracts are not isochronous, namely: (1) The LST-HST boundary has been associated with the Würm 2 Glaciation, which occurred at ~40-18 Ka.; (2) The TST-LST boundary is identified by a transgressive erosion surface, whose age ranges from ~12-5 Ka.; and (3) the HST-TST boundary is an unconformity between the submarine deltaic facies complex and the Middle Holocene marine flooding plain.

Keywords: Deltaic lobe; Lithofacies; Paleoshoreline; Regression; Systems tract; Transgression.