Alluvial-eolian Interaction in a Cambrian Rift Margin: the Pedra Das Torrinhas and Pedra Pintada Formations (guaritas Group, Rs)

This work presents a study of selected outcrops from the Pedra das Torrinhas Formation of the Guaritas Group (Cambrian, Camaquã Basin), near the basin bordering Encantadas Fault Zone. The studied succession includes al-luvial fan deposits that pass laterally into eolian deposits. Sedimentary facies and architectural element analysis were performed, followed by sedimentary petrography and microscopic porosity analysis, aiming to characterize the poros-ity of the deposits and its spatial distribution. The main objective was to contribute to a better understanding of the porosity spatial distribution in depositional systems characterized by the interaction between alluvial and eolian processes, with special reference to deposits formed prior to the development of terrestrial plants. Porosity values are related to depositional processes, with higher porosities associated to eolian dune deposits (mean of 8.4%), and lower porosity related to interdunes (mean of 3.4%) and alluvial fans (mean of 4.3%). Architectural elements analysis revealed the spatial relationships of these deposits, a response to the interplay of the eolian and alluvial processes. The integration of porosity data reveals that the interaction of alluvial and eolian processes results in heterogeneous distribution of porosity at the facies association scale. Eolian reworking of alluvial facies increases porosity whereas sheet-flood and other alluvial processes in the interdune areas reduce porosity.


INTRODUCTION
Prior to the evolution of land plants in the Early Paleozoic, subaerial depositional systems were very sensible to variations in rainfall, which caused great variations in surface run-off when well developed soils were absent (Went 2005). In that sense, those systems were similar to modern arid depositional environments, which commonly show interactions between alluvial and eolian systems (Bullard and Livingstone 2002), frequently in the form of reworking of fluvial and alluvial fan deposits by eolian processes (El-Baz et al. 2000, Maroulis et al. 2007, Veiga and Spalletti 2007.
On the other hand, the influence of river systems in eolian dune fields has been documented even in the most arid of the modern environments (e.g. Langford

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ANDRÉ MARCONATO et al. 1989, Tooth 2000, Stanistreet and Stollhofen 2002, Stromback et al. 2005. The interaction between eolian systems and alluvial fans is less documented (Clemmensen andAbrahamsen 1983, Gardner et al. 2006), and even less documented are the interactions of such systems before the evolution of land plants (Hadlari et al. 2006, Paim andScherer 2007). This work presents facies analysis of well-exposed successions recording the interactions of alluvial fans and an eolian dune field in the Cambrian successions of the Pedra das Torrinhas and Pedra Pintada formations, Camaquã Basin, Rio Grande do Sul State (Southernmost Brazil).
Alluvial and eolian depositional systems are responsible for hydrocarbon reservoirs and large scale aquifers, being the preferential targets for depositional architecture studies in recent years.
Detailed facies models have been developed for the main alluvial depositional systems (e.g. Collinson 1996, Miall 1996, as well as eolian systems (e.g. Brookfield 1992, Kocurek 1996 with an increasing interest in the particularities of the interactions among both systems (e.g. Langford 1989, Langford and Chan 1989, Stanistreet and Stollhofen 2002, Paim and Scherer 2007, with descriptions of the resulting depositional architecture (e.g. Herries 1993, Fischer et al. 2007). The quality of the here presented expositions enables a 3D architectural analysis, making it possible to document the spatial variation of the porosity of sedimentary rocks at several scales. Thus, the interaction between the Pedra das Torrinhas and Pedra Pintada formations, reported here in terms of facies and porosity analysis, may be used as an analog for the less exposed deposits in which the porosity heterogeneities are controlled by the interaction of alluvial fans and eolian processes, with applications to hydrocarbon and water reservoir studies, especially in rift basins.

GEOLOGICAL SETTING
The Camaquã Supergroup comprises more than 10 km thick of sedimentary and volcanic successions of Ediacaran to Early Cambrian age that crop out near Brazil's southern border, in the Rio Grande do Sul State (Fig. 1). The Supergroup is divided into five main units, from base to top: the Maricá Group (siliciclastic successions), the Bom Jardim Group (volcanic and volcano-sediment-ary successions), the Acampamento Velho Formation (volcanic succession), the Santa Bárbara Group (siliciclastic successions), and the Guaritas Group (siliciclastic successions).
The Guaritas Group, the uppermost unit of the Camaquã Supergroup, was deposited in a NNE-SSW trending basin that is 50 km wide and more than 150 km long. The basin is bounded by high-angle faults that uplifted Paleo and Neoproterozoic metamorphic rocks of the Dom Feliciano Belt and the Rio Vacacaí island arc terrane (Fragoso-Cesar 1991), being interpreted as a continental rift on the basis of its tectono-stratigraphic evolution (Almeida et al. 2009). The Guaritas Group was deposited during the Early Cambrian, as indicated by the soft-sediment deformation features that occur at the contact with shallow sills of the 535 Ma Rodeio Velho Intrusive Suite (Almeida 2005).

METHODS
In order to characterize the three-dimensional variation of sedimentary attributes and the depositional environments, sedimentary facies and architectural ele- ment analysis were applied to selected outcrops of the Pedra das Torrinhas and Pedra Pintada formations. Facies analysis followed the method described by Reading (1986), Walker (1992 and Miall (2000), and the architectural elements analysis was based on Miall (1985,1996).
Pebble and cobble data were obtained in order to characterize alluvial fan and braided river source areas.
In each counting site at least 100 clasts were analysed and ascribed to acid volcanics (V), granites (G), mylonites and low-grade metamorphic rocks (M), in order to be plotted in a ternary diagram.
Petrographic analysis was conducted in representative samples from the described sedimentary facies, which were classified according to each facies association in order to interpret the relationships between de-822 ANDRÉ MARCONATO et al.  positional processes and the resulting petrographic characteristics.
Paleocurrents were measured in cross-stratified sandstones in order to determine sedimentary transport trends while source-areas were inferred from pebble lithology from conglomerates.
The porosity analysis of sandstone was performed in thin sections impregnated with blue stained epoxi resin in order to evaluate the porous area with a digital image analyzer connected to a petrographic microscope. As a comparative criteria, inter-granular pores filled with cement were visually estimated in order to verify if there were any facies controls on the original porosity, which would have been masked by cementation and the development of intra-granular porosity.

FACIES ASSOCIATIONS
Three facies associations were described in the studied area, each one corresponding to a different lithostratigraphic unit. The two lower facies associations correspond to the Pedra das Torrinhas and Pedra Pintada formations, and were interpreted respectively as alluvial fan and eolian dune field deposits. A few kilometers from the basin border fault, the alluvial fan facies association displays a lateral transition into the eolian facies association. The upper facies associations was interpreted as braided river deposits and corresponds to the Serra do Apertado Formation, which is separated from the lower units by a regional disconformity (Paim et al. 2002, Paim and Scherer 2003, Almeida 2005.
Under microscopic analysis, sorting is the main feature that differentiates the sandstones from each facies associations. Compaction and cementation, on the other hand, are very similar in samples from all facies associations. Cementation is mainly represented by carbonatic cement filling primary and secondary pores, followed by intergranular kaolinitic cement. Quartz overgrowth is rare and ferruginous cement occurs as thin grain coatings. Primary pores are usually enlarged by secondary dissolution, resulting in elongated pores; floating grains and secondary pores are the product of feldspar or lithic fragments dissolution and grain fracturing. Porosity reduction by cementation is common and more intense in fine-grained samples.

ALLUVIAL FAN FACIES ASSOCIATION
The alluvial fan deposits are restricted to the surroundings of the basin border fault and composed mostly of conglomerates and breccias, which are poorly sorted, immature and often contain imbricated angular pebbles to cobbles. These lithotypes are associated with fineto medium-grained arkoses, commonly including sparse clasts. The alluvial fan facies association comprises the following sedimentary facies: -Breccias and conglomerates with imbricate clasts (F1) are massive to crudely stratified and composed mostly of granite and mylonite clasts. Conglomerate layers are 15 to 30 cm thick and commonly occur in cutand-fill structures ( Fig. 2a) or as metric tabular sheets (Fig. 2b). Clasts are up to 25 cm long, composed of mylonitic granites, quartz mylonites, granites, rhyolites and rare chlorite schists. Breccias beds occur where mylonite provenance prevail. Imbrication is predominantly parallel to the intermediate axis of the tabular clasts.
-Conglomerates and breccias with plane bedding (F2) consist of sheets to broad lobes of clast-supported conglomerates with sub-angular clasts and breccias that are laterally continuous for over 300 m, with 20 to 60 cm thick. Up to 30 cm, mylonite clasts eroded from the adjacent basement are the most common constituents of the conglomerate framework. Internally, each bed of this facies is composed of a coarser, lower, decimeter-scale layer of stratified conglomerate or breccia and an upper, decimeter to centimeter-scale layer of plane-bedded pebbly sandstone (Fig. 2b). This facies occurs as tens of meters thick amalgamated beds.
-Laminated sandstones (F3) are medium to coarse grained with sparse granules and display planar lamination. They are frequently associated with F1, and occur as 10 to 20 cm thick sheets or broad lenses, sometimes overlain by cut-and-fill structures of F1.
-Tabular cross-stratified sandstones (F4) are medium to coarse grained, with sparse granules, and show low angle cross stratification (Fig. 2c). This facies occurs as 10 to 20 cm thick tabular layers of metric extension or less frequently as metric lenses. These lenses and tabular layers are commonly overlain by F1 cut-and-fill structures.

Provenance analysis
The alluvial fan facies association was analyzed in four sites, distributed in a section nearly perpendicular to the basin border. The more abundant clasts, which usually comprises more than 20% of each sample, are composed of mylonitic granite and quartz-mylonites; thus, in the ternary diagrams, they plot near the metamorphic vertices. Although Chlorite schist is also present (rarely reaching 20%), they are absent in sites away from the border fault, whereas rhyolite clasts become more frequent basinwards, leading to an acid volcanics enrichment trend in the ternary diagram (Fig. 3).

Petrography
Alluvial fan deposits present a subtle grain size reduction from the base to the top of the succession, where there is also evidence of eolian reworking. Sandstones range from medium-to coarse-grained, with scattered granules, and present poor to very poor sorting and angular to sub-angular grains. Alluvial sandstones that may have an origin in reworked eolian deposits, as described by Paim (1994Paim ( , 1995 and Paim et al. (2002), are mediumgrained, have sub-rounded grains, and are better sorted.

Interpretation
The described facies and their spatial relationships suggest that this facies association is the product of sheetflood dominated alluvial fans (Blair and McPherson 1994). Clast imbrication in F1 indicates that pebbles and bigger clasts rolled on the bed surface and, thus, were transported as bed-load in traction currents (Walker 1975). The sheet-like form of most beds of F1, the presence of cut-and-fill structures and the association with beds of F3 suggests unconfined flow events, with peak discharge before deposition and capable of eroding the previous deposits. Moreover, F2 facies also suggests unconfined flow and is similar to the deposits described by Blair (1999), who interpreted them as the product of sheet-floods in alluvial fans. Cross-stratified facies (F4 and F5) reflect reworking of sheet-flood lobes by channelized lower-flow regime currents during waning flow, in a similar way as described by Blair (1987). F4 and F5 are respectively interpreted as the product of sub-aqueous straight-crested and sinuous-crested dunes, generated by unidirectional traction currents (Harms 1979).

EOLIAN DUNE FIELD FACIES ASSOCIATION
The succession dominated by moderately sorted sandstones of the Pedra Pintada Formation presents diagnostic features that allow the identification of an eolian origin.
-Trough cross-stratified sandstone with pin-stripe lamination (F6) is fine to medium grained and show medium-to large-scale trough cross-stratification. Individual sets range from 0.4 m to 5 m thick. The thickest sets are found far from the Encantadas Fault Zone, while towards the basin border the sets become smaller, rarely reaching one meter. Pin-stripe lamination (Hunter 1977, Fryberger andSchenk 1988) is conspicuous (Fig. 2d).
-Sandstones with climbing ripples (F7) are fine to medium grained and show supercritical climbing of symmetric to asymmetric ripples (Fig. 2e). Within successions dominated by F6, this facies commonly passes laterally into F8.
-Laminated sandstones (F8) are fine to medium grained and present plane bedding to low angle lamination, organized in centimeter to meter thick strata (Fig. 2f). These deposits may contain mudstone intraclasts and deflation lags.
-Conglomerates with imbricate clasts (F1) also occur in the eolian dune field facies association, as 10 to 20 cm thick, fining-upward layers with erosive bases.

Petrography
Samples of the eolian dune facies are generally medium-grained, with moderate grain sorting and subrounded grains. Packing is closed, with evidence of mechanical compaction, such as plane and concave-convex contacts among grains. Sandstones from interdune deposits are fine-to medium-grained, with moderate sorting and sub-rounded grains. Packing is usually closed. Thin sections of samples from the contact between sandstone and siltstone show a progressive loss of porosity associated to the decrease of the grain size from finegrained sand to silt.

Interpretation
F6 is interpreted as the product of migrating eolian dunes. Its stratification is marked by pin-stripe lamination that results of the differential weathering of grainfall and grainflow strata, as described by Hunter (1977) and Fryberger and Schenk (1988). The trough crossstratification suggests barchan or barchanoid dunes (Mc-Kee 1966). Thickness of individual sets decrease towards the basin border; it is probably due to a lower preservation, as described by Clemmensen and Abrahamsen (1983) in a similar context. The relationship between F1, F7, F8 and F9 facies and eolian facies (F6) suggests a flooded interdune context for these deposits. F1 is interpreted as unconfined flow deposits in interdune areas, recording the flood events. F7 records waning flood deposition of sand simultaneously from suspension and traction. F8 indicates previous eolian deposits reworked by tractive currents during fluvial floods in interdune areas. F9 is interpreted as settling deposits from standing water bodies in flooded interdunes, with subsequent subaerial exposition and desiccation.

BRAIDED RIVER FACIES ASSOCIATION
Braided river deposits overlie both the previous facies associations and present three sedimentary facies, two of which are also found in the previously described facies associations.
-Lenticular stratified conglomerates (F10) consist of lenses of clast-supported conglomerates with rounded pebbles to boulders, which are imbricated parallel to their intermediate axis. Sets are 20 and 50 cm thick, preserved in cut-and-fill structures or as several meters wide and long lenses (Fig. 2h). Lower boundaries are often erosional, and the upper ones may be either sharp or gradational to F4 and F5. Most of these bodies are crudely stratified, with plane bedding defined by alternation of coarser-and finer-grained strata. Locally, lowangle cross-stratified foresets can be seen, sometimes with coarse-grained sandstone layers that stress the stratification. Clasts are most composed of several types of granites, quartz and rhyolites.
-Tabular cross-stratified sandstones (F4) also present in the braided river facies association, occur as isolated lenses of 20 to 50 cm thick, within successions dominated by F5 and F10.
-Trough cross stratified sandstones (F5) are the most common deposits in this association. Sandstones are medium-to coarse-grained, with scattered granules to pebbles, and occur interbedded with F10 and F4. This facies occurs as 30 to 50 cm thick lenses or in cut-and-fill structures (Fig. 2h).

Provenance analysis
The braided river facies association was analyzed in three sites, one of them near the fault zone and the two others away from the basin border. Fluvial conglomerates are mostly composed of granite and mylonitic granite clasts, resulting in a scattered distribution of the plots in the diagram (Fig. 3). Quartz-mylonite clasts are rarer than in alluvial fan deposits, while rhyolite clasts are more common, surpassing the granite and mylonite granite contribution. As in the alluvial fan deposits, rhyolite clasts are more common with the increase in distance from the basin border fault.

Petrography
Samples from braided river deposits consist of poorly sorted, coarse-grained sandstones with sub-angular to angular grains. The packing is close; however, the pores 826 ANDRÉ MARCONATO et al.
show some evidence of an early cementation, later replaced by diagenetic cements.

Interpretation
All three facies in this association are interpreted as traction current deposits in bed-load dominated fluvial streams. Cross-stratified pebbly sandstones of F4 and F5 record subaqueous dune migration in fluvial streams, whereas conglomerates (F10) are interpreted as longitudinal bars deposits. The presence of bar deposits, the dominance of bedload strata accumulated within shallow channels, and the lack of flood-plains facies, altogether suggest that this facies association represents a braided river system.

VERTICAL STACKING AND LATERAL FACIES VARIATIONS
Seven columnar sections were studied (Fig. 5), five of them located in a set of outcrops near the basin border fault, whereas two others are located approximately 2 km basinward. In the five sections close to the basin border there are clear facies changes, with the dominant alluvial fan facies changing into eolian deposits (Fig. 5), the last ones prevailing in the two distal sections. Thus, the alluvial fan deposits pinch out basinward, with the consequent thickening of the eolian deposits (Fig. 4). A disconformity at the boundary with the braided river deposits of Serra do Apertado Formation is seen in all sections.
Vertical facies changes are defined in some sections by the dominance of alluvial fan facies at the base, interdune facies at the transition and eolian dunes facies to the top.

ARCHITECTURAL ELEMENTS ANALYSIS
The architectural elements analysis (Miall 1985(Miall , 1996 was applied to the identification and hierarchization of surfaces that represent changes or interruptions on the depositional processes and mark the boundary among bodies with definite geometry, such as fluvial channels or interdunes. The application of architectural elements analysis to eolian deposits was based on the classification of surfaces proposed by Brookfield (1977) and Kocurek (1988). According to these authors, first order surfaces in eolian deposits are the ones that represent climbing of dunes or draas, which may be associated with interdune deposits, resulting in surfaces with dips opposed to the depositional surfaces. Second order surfaces bound cross stratified sets and dip to the same direction as the cross strata, indicating dune climbing in the front of a draa. Third order surfaces represent small dip or direction change of dunes depositional surfaces, being analogous to the reactivation surfaces of subaqueous dunes.
Super-surfaces (Kocurek 1988) may trunk first order surfaces, present significant lateral continuity and have a relatively flat geometry, reflecting major paleogeographic change. Super-surfaces were used in section correlation in order to constrain lateral facies variations within each succession, and to define the spatial relationship between the eolian and the alluvial fan facies associations (Figs. 4 and 5). In the studied area, two super-surfaces were defined: super-surface 1 (SS1) is slightly irregular, and coincide with the boundary between alluvial fan deposits of the Pedra das Torrinhas Formation and the eolian dune field deposits of the Pedra Pintada Formation, while super-surface 2 (SS2) shows a planar geometry and represents the contact between the eolian dune field deposits of the Pedra Pintada Formation and braided river deposits by Serra do Apertado Formation.
Two architectural elements were recognized in the eolian dune fields association: Eolian dunes are the main architectural element of these deposits, being characterized by the stacking of trough cross stratification sets as a result of barchan or barchanoid dune migration (McKee 1966(McKee , 1979. Reactivation surfaces (third order surfaces sensu Brookfield 1977) are abundant in this element, truncating the top of the F6 facies depositional surfaces. Second order surfaces are locally found and indicate the presence of draas (Fig. 9).
Wet interdune deposits comprise mostly F7 to F9 facies and minor F1. This element is related to the first order surfaces, disposed in lenses up to a few meters thick between bodies of the eolian dunes element (Figs. 6 and 9).
The alluvial fan facies association encompasses continuous successions of two architectural elements: -Sheet-flood lobes are composed mainly of F2, and subordinate F1, disposed in tens of meters wide and tabular bodies up to several meters thick (Fig. 8)

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ANDRÉ MARCONATO et al.  resulting from multiple sheet-flood events. Locally tabular beds of F1 facies (Fig. 8) prevails in thick successions possibly due to events with minor input or minor preservation of the sandy portion from the antidune collapse process interpreted to this facies (Blair 1999).
-Isolated Fluvial Channels are centimeter-to meter-thick, preserved as cut-and-fill structures within successions dominated by the sheet-flood lobes element (Fig. 8). These channels are filled with lower flow regime facies, dominantly F5, organized both as individual or amalgamated lenses. This architectural element is interpreted as the reworking of sheet flood unconfined flows deposits by minor channels scoured on top of sheet floods lobes after the peak discharge (waning flow strata), in a similar way as described by Blair (1987).
The Braided River facies association was not studied in terms of architectural elements analyses due to the limited extent of its outcrops.

PALEOCURRENTS
Paleocurrent data was collected mainly in cross-stratified facies from the three facies associations in order to interpret alluvial source areas and to reconstruct sediment dispersal patterns of both alluvial and eolian systems.
In the alluvial fan facies association, paleoflow measurements were obtained essentially in F4 and F5 facies, with some few data from F3. The mean direction of transport (Fig. 9) of the alluvial fan facies association was to WNW, nearly perpendicular to the Encantadas Fault Zone, which is considered to have been active during the sedimentation of the unit (Almeida 2005).
In the eolian facies associations, paleocurrents were obtained from trough cross-stratified sandstones of F6 facies. The mean direction of transport, obtained with considerable volume of data and with adequate data dispersal, was roughly NE (Fig. 9).
In the braided river facies associations, measurements were obtained in sandstones of F4 and F5 facies.

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ANDRÉ MARCONATO et al. Fig. 7 -Photomosaic of the eolian dune field facies association showing the relationship between dune and interdune deposits and the main bounding surfaces. Note the 2 nd order surface that allows relating the dune deposit to a draa.
Like the alluvial fan facies association, the mean transport direction obtained for these deposits also points to NW, nearly perpendicular to the basin border, although presenting much narrower data (Fig. 9).

POROSITY ANALYSIS
A digital image analyser was used to perform the porosity analysis on thin sections impregnated with blue resin. The percentage of pores per area was obtained by mea-suring the area with blue pigment in digital images. Intergranular space, whether filled by cement or not, was visually estimated in order to evaluate possible controls of the type of deposit on the primary porosity (Table I).
Mean porosity in eolian dune deposits is 8.40%, with a standard deviation of 4.51, as an effect of the nearly continuous variation of the mean porosity, which ranges from 0.33% to 14.26% (Fig. 10a). Mean intergranular space is 12.54%, with a lower standard deviation, of 2.33. Taking into account that the effects of   cementation and secondary porosity are neglected in the visual evaluation of intergranular space, these higher values indicate that the original porosity (prior to compaction) was very high, possibly due to the good sorting of these deposits. Interdune deposits present mean porosity of 3.36% and standard deviation of 4.02%. This high standard deviation is the result of a wide porosity range, which spans from zero up to 11.22%. The intergranular space is highly variable, with a mean value of 8.44% and a standard deviation of 4.88%, which is higher than the deviation verified in the porosity (Fig. 10b). It is suggested that some samples had an early cementation, while other samples had less intergranular space as a result of poor sorting.
Samples from alluvial fan deposits present a mean porosity of 4.30%, with a standard deviation of 4.84% (Fig. 12d), which is also the result of an almost continuous change in the porosity (zero to 13.14%), with a median of 2.46%, due to the large number of samples with null porosity. The mean intergranular space is 7.5%, with a standard deviation of 3.63, reflecting the heterogeneity among the alluvial fan samples.
Samples from fluvial deposits (Fig. 10c) exhibit the lowest mean porosity (3.12%) and a standard deviation of 3.07, which is difficult to interpret due to the small amount of analyzed samples. Mean porosity ranges from zero to 6.12%. When these values are compared to the mean intergranular space (10.67%), which has a relatively small standard deviation, the importance of the cementation becomes evident on the preservation of the intergranular space, possibly due to early cements (prior to compaction) latter replaced by mesodiagenetic ones. Porosity higher than the intergranular space is related to samples with a substantial amount of secondary (intragranular) pores.
In a broad view, it can be concluded that there is a correlation between sedimentary facies and porosity values, with the highest, lowest and intermediate figures related to eolian dunes, interdune and braided river deposits, and alluvial fan deposits, respectively. If compared with the visual estimation of the intergranular space, porosity of eolian dune sandstones is still higher than in the others, suggesting that the main controlling factor on the porosity was the primary grain sorting.
It is worth to mention that the secondary porosity caused by superficial dissolution (cement and grains weathering) can have affected the presumed original porosity figures, since the samples were collected at outcrops.

DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
The characterization of facies association led to the recognition of a basinward transition from a basin border alluvial fan system to an eolian dune field system, which ultimately covers the alluvial fan deposits. At the transition among these facies associations, two types of alluvial-eolian interaction were set apart. A direct influence of alluvial fans in the dune field is shown by pebbly sheet-flood deposits within interdune strata. On the other hand, the eolian reworking of alluvial fan facies was identified in thin sections with abnormal sorting.
This interaction is connected to a non-vegetated topographic high at the basin border related to an active normal faulting during the deposition of the Guaritas Group, as well as moisture availability, once the alluvial fan main source rocks were located in the topographic high. Similar systems are expected in rift basins of arid settings formed after the evolution of land plants. Furthermore, these depositional systems would be typical on any rift border subaerial succession of Early Paleozoic or older age, despite climate conditions. Provenance data suggest distinct sources for the alluvial fan and braided river facies associations. The alluvial fan main sources are the nearby basement exposed at the basin border, where mylonites and mylonitic granites crop out. Differently, braided river deposits show a distinct assemblage of clast lithotypes, suggesting a wider drainage caption area. Despite that, paleocurrent data reveal that both associations had a transport direction nearly perpendicular to the border fault.
Petrographic analysis highlights the facies control on porosity, including a significant porosity increase due to eolian reworking of former alluvial deposits. Grain sorting and grain size are the main controlling agents on porosity, followed by cementation and compaction.
The integration of porosity and architecture reveals that the alluvial-eolian interactions have produced complex porosity heterogeneities at the facies association scale. The interlayering of interdune and alluvial fan deposits in eolian dune systems could cause a reduction in the bulk permeability, although not yielding true permeability barriers. Consequently, analogous deposits could behave as good water and hydrocarbons reservoirs, even though the presence of interbedded interdune and alluvial fan deposits (both difficult to identify in geophysical surveys) could affect the total porosity of the sedimentary deposit.