NON-SYMMETRIC RESPONSE TO BASE LEVEL RISE AND FALL: A CASE STUDY OF TWO ADJACENT FLUVIAL/DELTAIC SYSTEMS ALONG THE EAST TEXAS COAST
Along the East Texas coast, the Brazos and Trinity incised valleys developed in response to base level fall. Starting at the coast, or barrier island, and extending updip away from base level control (~100 km inland) the volume of space excavated to create the incised valleys underlying the present day lower reaches of both of these fluvial systems converges on 20 km3. This signifies a strong similarity in fluvial response for both systems during the falling limb of highstand and the lowstand systems tracts. Yet the transgressive and early highstand aggradational fill of the Brazos and Trinity incised valleys represent the two end members of fluvial response to base level rise. The Brazos incised valley is overfilled (~21 km3), while the Trinity incised valley is underfilled (< half full).
Taken together, the non-symmetric equilibrium profile response for these adjacent fluvial/deltaic systems to base level rise vs. base level fall implies different autocyclic and allocyclic mechanisms are controlling fluvial response over one glacial-eustatic cycle. Eustacy appears to be the dominate control on the equilibrium profile as sea level falls and accommodation is destroyed (i.e. incision occurs), while sediment supply (in this case a combination of climate, drainage basin size, and surface geology) appear to be the dominate control on the equilibrium profile as sea level rises and accommodation is created.