WERE PROTEROZOIC SHELF EDGES INHERENTLY UNSTABLE DUE TO LACK OF BIOTURBATION ?
This hypothesis can be tested at various localities, throughout the Precambrian, and at several scales: On hand-sample scale, Precambrian shelf sediments commonly display microbial mat textures whose mechanical behaviour can occasionally be inferred from their response to soft-sedimentary deformation or sedimentation processes. Hand sample examination commonly indicates a sticky behaviour of these biomats and a leathery strength, immobilizing grains, oversteepening ripple foresets, and trapping gas bubbles.
On outcrop scale, stacked microbially-influenced strata occasionally show large-scale fluid-escape structures that indicate overpressure development and seal failure at depths of 2-15 m. Despite the low confining pressures, dewatering at these shallow depths was already retarded. This suggests a high degree of very early and effective permeability compartmentalization, e.g. in individual pressure cells lined by microbial-mat bounding surfaces. The mechanical behaviour of these sediments may have resembled water beds.
Finally, on a basin scale, the pronounced sedimentary anisotropy and common overpressure buildup in Precambrian high-productivity shelf and shelf-edge sediments may have facilitated the initiation of sediment displacement, increased their frequency, and contributed to high runout distances of olistostromes and slide sheets. The shelf-margin architecture of Precambrian passive margins should therefore be examined for the presence of a higher degree of mass wasting than in their Phanerozoic counterparts.