ANTECEDENT TOPOGRAPHIC CONTROLS ON QUATERNARY DEPOSITION IN A TRIBUTARY ESTUARINE SYSTEM, CROATAN SOUND, NORTHEASTERN NORTH CAROLINA
Sediment relationships observed in Croatan Sound, a drowned tributary of the Roanoke/Albemarle drainage system, may be representative of depositional patterns in similar drowned tributary streams. Where preserved, depositional sequences display a vertical succession of three major facies. 1) A basal lowstand facies characterized by soil development and sub-aerial erosion of uplands in concert with deposition of a spectrum of terrigenous sediments along stream valleys. 2) An intermediate estuarine facies produced by gradual flooding and broadening of stream valleys that results generally in deposition of mud in deeper channel areas and of shoreline erosion-derived sand on shallower non-channel areas. 3) An overlying fining-upward marine shelf facies that partially truncates the previously deposited lowstand and estuarine facies. Antecedent topography within the subsurface strongly influences depositional patterns in overlying sequences. Streams repeatedly occupy the same course during successive sea-level lowstands. Each depositional sequence alters or truncates portions of the preceding sequence or sequences. The result is a stacked series of similar marine shelf deposits that are locally separated by remnants of fluvial and/or estuarine channel deposits.