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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

CSPG Special Publications

Abstract


Shelf Sands and Sandstones — Memoir 11, 1986
Pages 277-291
Tide-Dominated Shelves

Tidal Sand Wave Facies, Rancho Rojo Sandstone (Permian), Arizona

Ronald D. Kreisa, Richard J. Moiola, Arvid Nottvedt

Abstract

The Permian Rancho Rojo Sandstone (0 to 18 m thick), which crops out along 40 km of the southern edge of the Colorado Plateau, central Arizona, was recognized as a marine sand wave deposit by Blakey (1979). It conformably overlies the fluvial Hermit Formation and grades upward into the marine Bell Rock Member of the Schnebly Hill Formation. We have defined three facies interpreted as having been formed in a transgressive estuarine to open marine succession.

Facies 1: The basal Rancho Rojo Sandstone comprises giant-scale (3–12 m) cross-bed sets interpreted as estuarine tidal sand wave deposits. Cross-bed foresets dip westward, reflecting sand wave migration related to the dominant tidal current that may have been reinforced by saline density currents. Where their dip is less than 17°, giant foresets contain cast-dipping tabular- to wedge-shaped sets of large-scale (5 to 80 cm) cross-beds formed by megaripples that climbed the lee slope of the sand wave under the influence of the subordinate tidal current. Where the dip of giant foresets is greater than 17°, megaripples were inhibited and sandwave foresets consist of simple, tabular beds, 1 to 25 cm thick. The influence of tidal currents is recorded in these beds by pause planes lined with mud drapes, small mud intraclasts and mud intraclast/mud drape couplets.

Facies 2: The overlying facies consists of large-scale (0.1 to 1 m) trough and tabular cross-beds that formed in a shallow marine environment established by continued transgression. Paleocurrents of this facies are strongly bimodal north and south, 90° rotated from the dominant east-west paleocurrents of the underlying facies. A similar relationship exists today between tidal current directions from onshore (estuarine) and offshore areas in the North Sea.

Facies 3: A ripple cross-laminated facies, which indicates further reduction of tidal energy in a deeper marine setting, occurs at the top of the succession.

This association of facies may be generally representative of tide-dominated, transgressive, shallow marine sequences.


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