2. Fan delta front The facies belt of a fan delta front mainly comprises conglomeratic and sandstone mixed with grayish-green mud sand and a little inferior oil shale. The lithology of this facies belt varies considerably , and this facies belt is the best developed part in a fan delta sand body , which can be further divided into a subaqueous distributary channel , subaqueous distributary mouth bar , and sheet sand . The subaqueous distributary channel is a combination of conglomeratic and sandstone , mixed with thin layers of mudstone , and it develops megascopic trough cross bedding , parallel bedding , and cross bedding . The thickness of a single sequence is 0.3–2 m, and positive rhythmic layer fining upward is presented. The superimposed sand body thickness of a multilayer river can reach tens of meters, and its SP curve mostly shows a cylinder shape. The river mouth bar is formed by the inter bedding of well sorted pebbly sandstone and sandstone with gray mudstone. Bedding , dominated by low-angle planar cross bedding and parallel bedding , is developed. The SP curve shows a funnel shape-bell shape or fore set finger shape. In certain fan-delta front facies, the river mouth bar is poorly developed or not developed at all. Sheet sand, which is a sand body, can be seen as a thin layer distributed at the outer edge of a river mouth bar , with lithology fining and dominated by sedimentary sandstone . The SP curve shows finger and serrated shapes . Gilbert-type fan deltas are also common in ancient lakes located at the crack edge of a lacustrine basin and steep slope zone 3. Front (fan) delta Front (fan) deltas enter semi-deep lake areas , and their lithology is light and dark gray mudstone mixed with a little sandstone, siltstone, calcareous shale , and oil shale . Many ostracoda and pyrites are contained in the mudstone. The sandstone mainly develops miniature wave ripple cross bedding and ripple crossing bedding. The SP curve shows a serrated or the low-amplitude flat shape . The underlying layer of a regressive fan delta is mainly deep lake sub facies. Front contemporaneous deposit is mostly deep lake sub facies also . Its main sequence is coarsening upward , the sand body plane is shown to be fan shaped , and the section form is lenticular . 1. Topset (fan delta plain) This is mainly the braided river sedimentation of a fan delta plain, which mainly contains coarse-grained sediments including gravelstone , conglomeratic , and sandstone supported by matrix or particles . Channel sand with a thickness of up to tens of meters is deposited by the longitudinal bar and transverse bar in the channel. The inter channel sediments are mostly amaranth and variegated mudstone; nodules may be contained, and mud cracks can be seen. In addition , high-angle planar cross bedding can be seen in the channel . 2. Foreset (fan delta front) The foreset is the most developed part of a fan delta sand body , which is composed mainly of high-angle conglomeratic and foreset sandstone , and it can be divided further into sand microfacies such as subaqueous distributary channels and front bars . (1) Subaqueous distributary channel This is mainly composed of conglomeratic and sandstone, and high-angle planar and trough cross beddings are developed. Local conglomerates are shown as directional alignment, and many intrastratal scour surfaces, lag gravels, and boulder clays are present. The interchannel sediment is mainly sand shale interbed , formed because of an overflowing channel or crevasse in the flood period. The SP curve of distributary channel deposit is dominated by cylinder and serrated cylinder shapes. (2) Front bar In the depositional sequence of Gilbert-type fan deltas, the high-angle foreset gravel bar is well developed. The thickness of a single layer of conglomeratic is usually more than 1.5 m. It is in abrupt contact between the bottom and the underlying layer, and conglomerate is mostly shown as having imbricate or directional alignment with a foreset angle of 25°–45°, coarsening upward or with alternating intrastratal grain size change . Toward the basin, gravel foreset gradually changes into sandy foreset . The top and bottom of the sand layer mostly show gradual change with the fine-coarse-fine sequence characteristic . Outside the river mouth bar, thin frontal sheet sand that transits into the bottom set can be developed. The SP curve of the front bar shows a serrated funnel shape-cylinder shape combination and a progradational finger shape . (3) Bottom set (prodelta) The bottom set comprises fine-grained sediments of the front (fan) delta, and the lithology is gray to dark gray mudstone, shale, and oil shale , possibly mixed with a few thin siltstone layers . The SP curve mostly shows a flat straight line. 11.7.3.3 Gilbert-Type Model Gilbert-type fan deltas are also common in ancient lakes located at the crack edge of a lacustrine basin and steep slope zone . This type of fan delta has an obvious three-tiered structure, comprising topset , foreset , and bottom set (Table 11.16).