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AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 55 (1971)

Issue: 3. (March)

First Page: 412

Last Page: 431

Title: Widespread, Synchronously Deposited, Burrow-Mottled Limestone Beds in Greenhorn Limestone (Upper Cretaceous) of Kansas and Southeastern Colorado

Author(s): Donald E. Hattin (2)

Abstract:

In central Kansas the Hartland Shale and Jetmore Chalk Members of the Greenhorn Limestone contain 16 burrow-mottled, ledge-forming, chalky limestone beds that can be traced across the entire outcrop. The same beds are recognized in equivalent strata of the Bridge Creek Limestone Member of westernmost Kansas, and all but one or two can be recognized in a Bridge Creek exposure in southwestern Pueblo County, Colorado. For a distance of nearly 450 mi some of these beds lie on, below, or close to equally persistent bentonite seams. The parallelism of bentonite seams and adjacent or nearly adjacent beds of limestone, and the uniform relative spacing of all the limestone beds prove that some of the latter are time parallel and suggest most convincingly that each of these widespr ad beds is time parallel. In contrast to intervening beds of laminated shaly chalk, the limestone beds lack internal stratification because of activity of a highly mobile infauna.

The shaly chalk beds contain higher percentages of terrigenous detritus, organic carbon, and pyrite than the limestone beds, and are interpreted as reflecting greater rates of terrigenous detrital influx and an interstitial reducing environment that was inimical to development of a burrowing infauna. Smaller organic carbon and pyrite content of the limestones is believed to reflect a lower clay content of original sediments, and at least a partly oxidizing interstitial environment, as suggested by the high degree of bioturbation. Despite substrate differences, the aqueous environment directly above the sediment-water interface did not change significantly as sediment type alternated from detritus-rich to detritus-poor, because the shelly epifauna is essentially the same in adjacent be s of shaly chalk and chalky limestone.

The widespread, apparently time-parallel limestone beds are believed to be the result of regionally manifested changes in volume of terrigenous detrital influx, coming principally from the west, that were superimposed on a more or less continuous accumulation of carbonate sediments. The noncrushed condition of macrofossils and fecal pellets suggests that limestone beds suffered early lithification; this process was probably influenced by initially greater purity of limestone-forming muds, slower sedimentation, and interstitial circulation resulting from bioturbation.

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