About This Item

Share This Item

The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

CSPG Bulletin

Abstract


Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology
Vol. 34 (1986), No. 2. (June), Pages 240-270

The Eureka Sound Group (Upper Cretaceous - Oligocene), Canadian Arctic Islands

Andrew D. Miall

ABSTRACT

More than 18.5 km of new stratigraphic sections in central Ellesmere Island and Axel Heiberg Island form the basis for redefining the Eureka Sound Formation as a group with nine constituent formations, and include the type sections for six of the nine new formations.

Palynostratigraphic data are used to show that most of the units are markedly diachronous, reflecting a complex paleogeographic evolution of the Arctic Islands area during the various phases of the Eurekan Orogeny. Sediments were shed from active upwarps, such as Princess Margaret Arch and Sverdrup Basin Rim, into seven major basins. Sedimentation may also have been affected by regional (global?) changes in sea level. Most deposits are fluvial or deltaic, but a major marine transgression occurred in Remus Basin (central Ellesmere Island) during Late Paleocene - Early Eocene time.

LE GROUPE EUREKA SOUND (CRETACE SUPERIEUR-OLIGOCENE), ARCHIPEL ARCTIQUE CANADIEN

RESUME

La description de plus de 18 km de profiles stratigraphiques aux iles Ellesmere et Axel Heiberg constitue le fondement pour redefinir la formation Eureka Sound comme groupe, dont neuf formations sont les ingredients; ces profiles comprennent les stratotypes pour six de ces nouvelles formations.

Les donnees palynostratigraphiques servent a montrer que les unites sont remarquablement diachroniques, et refletent une evolution paleogeographique complexe de l'archipel arctique durant les diverses phases de l'orogenese Eureka. Les dechets sedimentaires furent repandus a partir de bombements actifs, tels Princess Margaret Arch et la bordure du bassin Sverdrup, au sein de sept bassins sedimentaires majeurs. Le taux de sedimentation aurait aussi ete influence par des variations (globales) du niveau marin. Les depots sedimentaires sont, pour la plupart, d'origine fluviale ou deltaique cependant qu'une transgression marine majeure eut lieu au bassin Remus (ile Ellesmere centrale) a la fin du Paleocene et au debut de l'Eocene.

Traduit par A. Zolnai


Pay-Per-View Purchase Options

The article is available through a document delivery service. Explain these Purchase Options.

Watermarked PDF Document: $14
Open PDF Document: $24