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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists

Abstract


The Mountain Geologist
Vol. 49 (2012), No. 3. (July), Pages 77-99

Previous HitSedimentologyNext Hit and Previous HitStratigraphyNext Hit of the Previous HitUpperNext Hit Previous HitCretaceousNext Hit (Previous HitCenomanianNext Hit) Previous HitFrontierNext Hit Previous HitFormationNext Hit, Previous HitNortheastNext Hit Previous HitBighornNext Hit Previous HitBasinNext Hit, Previous HitWyomingNext Hit, Previous HitU.S.A.Next Hit

Andrew J. Hutsky, Christopher R. Fielding, Trevor J. Hurd, C. Kittinger Clark

Abstract

A detailed facies analysis of the Previous HitUpperNext Hit Previous HitCretaceousNext Hit (Previous HitCenomanianNext Hit) Previous HitFrontierNext Hit Previous HitFormationNext Hit was conducted over a ~ 35 kilometer outcrop belt in the Previous HitnortheastNext Hit Previous HitBighornNext Hit Previous HitBasinNext Hit, Previous HitWyomingNext Hit, Previous HitU.S.A.Next Hit Nine recurring lithofacies are identified: 1. dark-gray, laminated mudstone with bentonite intervals (offshore marine), 2. dark-gray, laminated mudstone with thin sandstone intervals (prodelta), 3. thinly interbedded siltstone and fine-grained sandstone (distal delta front), 4. thickly bedded, sharp-based sandstones with thin siltstone partings (middle delta front), 5. amalgamated, sharp-based sandstones (proximal delta front/river mouth), 6. non-bioturbated, fine-grained sandstone lacking siltstone partings (Previous HitupperNext Hit shoreface), 7. brown, fissile, laminated siltstone with abundant plant debris (coastal/alluvial floodplain), 8. trough cross-bedded sandstone (coastal fluvial channel), and 9. erosional based, low-relief, laterally extensive pebble/cobble accumulations (transgressive lag). Correlation of key stratigraphic surfaces (pebble lags, bentonites) and individual sandstone beds, and analysis of vertical facies stacking patterns indicate the preservation of multiple coarsening-upward cycles. Such cycles consist of basal, offshore marine/prodelta facies, overlain by progressively more proximal deposits containing sedimentary features consistent with the deposition and progradation of wave- (hummocky cross-stratification, symmetrical ripples) and tide-(bimodal cross-bedding) influenced, fluvially dominated (syneresis cracks, current ripples and cross-bedding, impoverished trace fossil suites) deltas. Southward-directed cross-bedding (Peay and Torchlight members) and gently dipping clinoforms (Facies 4, 5; Peay Sandstone Member) indicate the broadly southward progradation of digitate delta fronts into shallow-marine settings under accommodation-limited conditions. Cycles lacking significant sandstone accumulations (Facies 4, 5) likely represent distal expressions of individual progradational events. Occurrences of cycle-capping pebble lags (Facies 9) suggest that transgressions led to the significant winnowing and top-truncation of accommodation-limited accumulations, generating isolated, mudstone-encased sandstone bodies observed throughout the Previous HitFrontierNext Hit Previous HitFormationTop.


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