About This Item

Share This Item

The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

GCAGS Transactions

Abstract


Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions
Vol. 20 (1970), Pages 262-262

Abstract: Depositional Systems in the Woodbine Formation (Upper Creataceous), Northeast Texas

William B. Oliver

ABSTRACT

The Woodbine Formation is composed largely of terrigenous sediment eroded from Paleozoic sedimentary and weakly metamorphosed sedimentary rocks of the Ouachita Mountains in southern Oklahoma and Arkansas, and subsequently deposited in a complex of nearshore environments along the margins of a broadly subsiding basin (Northeast Texas Basin). Three principal depositional systems are recognized in Woodbine rocks - a fluvial system, a high-destructive delta system, and a shelf-strandplain system. Their recognition is based on a regional outcrop and subsurface investigation in which external geometry of framework sands was integrated with lithology, sedimentary structures, fossil distribution, and bounding relationships.

Two components of the fluvial system, a tributary channel sand facies and a meander belt sand facies, are developed in the Dexter Member (lower Woodbine) northeast of a line from Dallas to Tyler. To the south and southwest, a high-destructive delta system is persistent throughout the entire Woodbine section. The three component facies of the delta system are: progradational channel-mouth bar sands; coastal barrier sands, deposited along shore adjacent to channel mouths; and prodelta-shelf muds. The Lewisville (upper Woodbine) shelf-strandplain system, developed in the northern third of the basin marginal to principal deltaic facies, is composed of two facies: shelf muds; and strandplain sands, accumulated along shore.

Near the end of deposition of the Woodbine, but before transgression by Eagle Ford seas, emergence of the Sabine Uplift resulted in erosion of Woodbine sediments. These were subsequently redeposited along margins of the uplift as the Harris Sand.

End_of_Record - Last_Page 262-------

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS AND ASSOCIATED FOOTNOTES

Continental Oil Company, Houston, Texas

Copyright © 1999 by The Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies