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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Journal of Sedimentary Research (SEPM)

Abstract


Journal of Sedimentary Research
Vol. 87 (2017), No. 9. (September), Pages 1019-1047
Research Articles
DOI: 10.2110/jsr.2017.54

Highly Seasonal and Perennial Previous HitFluvialNext Hit Facies: Implications For Climatic Control On the Douglas Creek and Parachute Creek Members, Green River Formation, Southeastern Uinta Basin, Utah, U.S.A.

Ryan D. Gall, Lauren P. Birgenheier, Michael D. Vanden Berg

Abstract

The early to middle Eocene Green River Formation consists of continental strata deposited in Laramide ponded basins in Utah, Colorado, and Wyoming. This study (1) documents Previous HitfluvialNext Hit and lacustrine strata from the Douglas Creek and Parachute Creek members of the middle Green River Formation, southeastern Uinta Basin, Utah, and (2) uses new interpretations of the link between climate and Previous HitfluvialNext Hit sedimentary expression to interpret the terrestrial evolution of early Eocene climate. The stratigraphy was analyzed via outcrops along a 10 km transect in Main Canyon on the Tavaputs Plateau, and is divided into three distinct, stratigraphically separated depositional settings: (1) the lowermost Interval 1 is dominated by amalgamated sandstone channels that contain 70–100% upper-flow-regime sedimentary structures. The channels are interpreted to represent Previous HitfluvialNext Hit deposits controlled by a highly seasonal climate, where most deposition was limited to seasonal flooding events. (2) Interval 2 is dominated by alternating siliciclastic and carbonate lacustrine deposits, interpreted as local pulsed Previous HitfluvialNext Hit siliciclastic Previous HitinputNext Hit into shallow Lake Uinta, and periods of Previous HitfluvialNext Hit quiescence represented by littoral carbonate deposition. (3) The uppermost Interval 3 is dominated by erosionally-based, trough cross bedded sandstone channels interbedded with littoral lacustrine and deltaic deposits. The Interval 3 sandstone channels are interpreted as perennial Previous HitfluvialNext Hit deposits with relatively little variation in annual discharge, akin to modern humid-temperate Previous HitfluvialNext Hit systems. The stratigraphic transition from seasonally controlled (Interval 1) to perennial (Interval 3) Previous HitfluvialNext Hit deposits is interpreted to represent a fundamental shift in Eocene climate, from the peak hyperthermal regime of the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum (EECO) to a more stable post-EECO climate.


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