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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 47 (1963)

Issue: 2. (February)

First Page: 371

Last Page: 372

Title: Late Mississippian Rhythmic Sediments of the Mississippi Valley: ABSTRACT

Author(s): David H. Swann

Article Type: Meeting abstract

Abstract:

Late Valmeyeran and Chesterian sediments that repeatedly filled the subsiding Illinois basin are a quarter autochthonous carbonate, a quarter sand, and half mud brought from remote northeastern sources by a major river system, the Michigan River. These are arranged in Previous HitcyclesNext Hit implying shoreline fluctuation landward (northeastward) and seaward through a range of a few hundred miles. About 70 minor reversals in shoreline movement are Previous HitsuperimposedNext Hit on about 15 major Previous HitcyclesNext Hit. Increases in competence, perhaps in phase with modest lowering of Previous HitseaNext Hit-Previous HitlevelNext Hit, repeatedly changed the Michigan River into a prograding stream, pushing its delta scores of miles across a marine basin only a few tens of feet deep. Advancing distributaries carved grooves well below Previous HitseaNext Hit-Previous HitlevelNext Hit through frontal and ateral mud banks--grooves later filled by elongate sand bodies analogous with modern barfingers and pass fillings. In late stages the delta supported land vegetation. The carbonate phase

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of the cycle was initiated by decrease in stream competence and continued basin subsidence. Changes in Previous HitseaNext Hit-Previous HitlevelTop and stream competence depended on climatic variation.

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