Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Earth-Science Reviews journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/earscirev Time-stratigraphy in point sourced river deltas: Application to sediment budgets, shelf construction, and paleo-storm records Janok P. Bhattacharya a, *, Andrew D. Miall b , Curtis Ferron a , Jeremy Gabriel a , Nicolas Randazzo a , David Kynaston a , Brian R. Jicha c , Brad S. Singer c a School of Geography and Earth Sciences (SGES), McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada b Department of Earth Sciences, University of Toronto, Canada c Department of Geoscience, University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States ARTICLE INFO Keywords: Deltas Sequence stratigraphy Time-stratigraphy Wheeler diagrams Fluvial ABSTRACT Coastal uvial and deltaic deposits are locally incomplete recorders of elapsed time, but where detailed three- dimensional stratigraphic geometries can be constructed from well sections or high-resolution seismic data, and dated using high-precision chronostratigraphic methods, such as 14C dating, the construction of three-dimen- sional time-space (Wheeler) diagrams reveals important insights regarding the relationships between basin ar- chitecture, accommodation rates, sedimentation rates, stratigraphic preservation, and the nature of autogenic and allogenic processes. Analysis of the time-stratigraphic history of point-sourced delta systems, using strike and dip cross sections, is used to evaluate the completeness of the stratigraphic record to resolve how basins ll, how vertical stratigraphic successions record time, and which surfaces record the longest hiatuses. The paper includes analyses and comparison of Quaternary and Cretaceous river and delta systems. Supply-dominated systems fed by rivers that are free to avulse, like the Holocene highstand Mississippi Deltas in the Gulf of Mexico, show a strong autogenic record. In the Mississippi deltas, a quasi-continuous Holocene stratigraphic record can be reconstructed but this record is distributed among a series of laterally oset delta complexes and component delta lobes. Although 1D vertical sections may sample less than 25% of the total time, and in many cases less than a few percent, a hiatus in one section typically correlates to deposits elsewhere. Deltas fed by entrenched rivers, and especially the lowstand shelf edge systems in the Gulf of Mexico, as well as the Mahakam in Kalimantan Indonesia, form a series of laterally-oset lobes at the shelf edge that look supercially similar in their pattern and areal scale to the autogenic lobes of the Mississippi delta, but the time stratigraphic relationships are very dierent. Rather than a quasi-complete time-stratigraphic record, each shelf edge lobe is interpreted as an allogenic lowstand delta, deposited over tens of thousands, versus thousands of years, and are bounded by a prolonged non-de- positional hiatus, time equivalent to highstand deposition conned to the inner shelf. Analysis of strike cross sections within an allogenic lobe of the Lagniappe lowstand delta reveals an autogenic signal, similar, but at a smaller scale than the Mississippi. In 1D, the progradational part of an upward coarsening deltaic parasequence records the time it takes the delta to prograde past a given point, which is estimated to be a few hundred years, representing only a few percent of the time associated with progradation and transgression of a parasequence. Nevertheless, this part of the succession records the highest rates of deposition (typically 1050 m/ka). Much of the time associated with a parasequence is tied up at the top surfaces that record periods of bypass, as the lobe progrades farther seaward, as well as transgressive surfaces of erosion and deepening. The trangressive units deposit at much slower rates (1 m/ka) recorded by highly bioturbated condensed sections. Analysis of uvial and deltaic oodplains and channel belts also show a highly incomplete record (as little as 5% of elapsed time), reecting the observation that rivers only occupy a small part of any given oodplain at any given time, especially when rivers are entrenched and oodplains may be exposed to form paleosols. Entrenched river deposits, such as valley lls, may record only a few percent of the total time, indicating that most of the valley records bypass and erosion. Aggrading oodplains, which may be more common during highstands of sea level, may contain more complete records, including peats and coals, with up to 50% of time recorded by https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2019.102985 Received 1 February 2019; Received in revised form 15 October 2019; Accepted 18 October 2019 Corresponding author. E-mail address: bhattaj@mcmaster.ca (J.P. Bhattacharya). Earth-Science Reviews 199 (2019) 102985 0012-8252/ © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. T