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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Journal of Sedimentary Research (SEPM)

Abstract


Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
Vol. 57 (1987)No. 1. (January), Pages 108-116

Evaporite Depositional Fabrics in the Deeply Buried Jurassic Buckner Formation, Alabama

Tim K. Lowenstein (2)

ABSTRACT

The Upper Jurassic Buckner Formation contains evaporites (Previous HitanhydriteNext Hit) buried to depths of up to nearly 6,000 m in southwestern Alabama. Although these evaporites and the associated sediments have been deformed and mineralogically altered, some primary depositional textures and fabrics remain. This establishes the Buckner Formation as the most deeply buried succession of evaporites from which primary features have been reported.

A cored section of the Buckner Formation contains repetitive depositional sequences, from 1.5 m to 5.5 m in thickness, of 1) dolostone facies (shallow, restricted lagoon) overlain by 2) nodular Previous HitanhydriteNext Hit facies (sabkha). Within the nodular Previous HitanhydriteNext Hit facies, layers containing nodules surrounded by siliciclastic sediment and finely crystalline dolomite are interpreted as having formed by displacive growth of gypsum or Previous HitanhydriteNext Hit at or above a sabkha water table. Other intervals within the nodular Previous HitanhydriteNext Hit facies consist of vertically oriented and elongated nodules thought to be pseudomorphs after gypsum that originally formed by subaqueous crystal growth.

Each of the Buckner Formation sequences represents the outbuilding of an arid shoreline with progradation of sabkha evaporites and siliciclastics over lagoonal carbonates in a manner similar to the Holocene sequences of the Persian Gulf and the northwest Gulf of California. The Buckner sequences that contain the vertically elongated Previous HitanhydriteTop nodules differ from the "normal" Persian Gulf record of supratidal sabkha deposition in that these pseudomorphs are interpreted as having formed as gypsum in temporary ponds of a sabkha proper, a gypsum pan.


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