About This Item

Share This Item

The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

GCAGS Transactions

Abstract


Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions
Vol. 41 (1991), Pages 406-406

Abstract: Organic-Rich, Radioactive Marine Shale: A Case Study of a Shallow-Water Condensed Section, Cretaceous Shaftesbury Formation, Alberta, Canada

Dale A. Leckie (1), Chaitanya Singh (2), Fariborz Goodarzi (1), John H. Wall (1)

ABSTRACT

Organic-rich radioactive shales are a common regional feature resting on Cretaceous transgressive surfaces in western Canada. The basal shale in the Shaftesbury Formation (Late AIbian) from the Peace River area of northern Alberta is characterized by high gamma-ray, high resistivity, and low neutron wireline log signatures. Three facies, in ascending order, are present within the basal Shaftesbury Formation: 1) a brackish-water estuarine shale; 2) a restricted, marginal marine shale which is radioactive; and 3) an open-marine, normal salinity shale. The radioactive shale contains an abundance of large, lenticular algal cysts (cf. Lancettopsis lanceolata Madler 1963) which are rare in overlying and underlying shale. The algal cysts and high organic content may be the locus of the radioactivity. The total organic carbon content (^sim6%) and sulphur content (^sim3.4%) of the radioactive shale also are higher than the shale above and below, with a different mineralogy as well. The radioactive portion of the basal Shaftesbury shale has the characteristics of a condensed section; it is directly above a ravinement surface and transgressive-lag deposit which, in turn, locally overlie estuarine sediments deposited within an incised valley. Other characteristics include evidence of low oxygen values, low concentrations of benthonic foraminifera, and evidence of a slow sedimentation rate. Palynological, micropaleontolocal, and geochemical results indicate that the radioactive shale was deposited in restricted, marginal marine conditions and that overlying shale shows a progressive deepening to nearshore, open-marine conditions. This radioactive shale does not represent the deepest water sediments of the transgression but is a condensed section deposited in relatively shallow water.

End_of_Record - Last_Page 406-------

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS AND ASSOCIATED FOOTNOTES

(1) Institute of Sedimentary and Petroleum Geology, Geological Survey of Canada, 3303 33rd St., NW, Calgary, Alberta T2L 2A7, Canada

(2) Alberta Geological Survey, Alberta Research Council, P. O. Box 8330, Postal Station F, Edmonton, Alberta T6H 5X2, Canada

Copyright © 1999 by The Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies