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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
West Texas Geological Society
Abstract
Cyclic and Reciprocal Sedimentation in Virgilian Strata of Southern New Mexico1
Abstract
Virgilian
cycles
of the Holder Formation in the shelf area on the northeast side of the Pennsylvanian Oro Grande basin contrast lithologically with the
cycles
in equivalent basinal sediments cropping out to the south and west. Basin
cycles
begin with cross-bedded sandstone and grade upward through relatively thick shale to a dark tidal flat lime mudstone and shale. Shelf
cycles
contain a variable sandstone and shale lower member, with local channel-fill conglomerate. This grades upward through normal marine limestone and shale to a massive capping bed of shoal-water lime grainstone of algal-foraminiferal lime mud mound facies.
The two
sequences
may be correlated by considering that
sea
level
fluctuated repeatedly over the whole basin, and that major sedimentation alternated between the shelves and the basin. At periods of low stand, shelf areas were dry, sediment crossed the shelf, and terrigenous clastic materials began filling in the basin. Argillaceous sedimentation continued as
sea
level
rose. The shelves were drowned, and deeper, turbid, and partly euxinic water in the basin made the basin inhospitable for organisms. Late in each cycle, clastic influx diminished, and thick shoal limestones formed in clear water on the shelves whereas, perhaps, little or no sedimentation took place in the basin. Regression regularly occurred during this period of
carbonate
shelf sedimentation. Limestone beds capping the
cycles
commonly possess leached or oxidized surfaces, indicating that their tops were exposed subaerially. Limestone was deposited in the basin only when
sea
level
had dropped enough to turn its
level
floor into tidal flats and evaporitic ponds.
The basin-shelf margin area may be examined in detailed cross section on the western front of the northern Sacramento Mountains. These studies help document a sedimentational theory first published in 1958 by Van Siclen who pointed out that late Paleozoic
carbonate
shelf margins were built up around the east side of the Midland basin in north-central Texas, and that the basin was reciprocally filled with clastic sediments at times of lowered
sea
level
. In the Sacramento-Oro Grande case periodic
sea
-
level
drops at a minimum of 100-150 feet can be estimated. Such fluctuations probably occurred here at least 20 times during latest Pennsylvanian time.
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