Late Cretaceous to early Tertiary magnetostratigraphy of a continental sequence: Red Deer Valley, Alberta, Canada

1985 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 567-583 ◽  
Author(s):  
John F. Lerbekmo ◽  
Kenneth C. Coulter

The Red Deer Valley exposes a conformable 350 m thick late Campanian to Early Paleocene fluvial–deltaic coal-bearing sequence named the Edmonton Group. Systematic sampling and paleomagnetic analysis of the dominant lithologies (mudstones, sandstones, and shales) were carried out over five sections correlated by coal seams to provide some 500 sites (stratigraphic levels). Primary detrital remanent magnetization directions after alternating field cleaning produce a polarity reversal pattern correlatable to sea-floor magnetic anomalies 29–33.The Campanian–Maastrichtian boundary, based upon the first appearance of Wodehouseia, and the Maastrichtian–Paleocene (Cretaceous–Tertiary) boundary, based upon an Ir anomaly associated with dinosaur and Cretaceous palynofloral extinctions, correlate closely magnetostratigraphically with the marine foraminiferal section at Gubbio, Italy. Radiometric dating of bentonites has indicated the ages of these boundaries to be approximately 71 and 64 Ma, respectively.

1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 91-91
Author(s):  
A. A. Ekdale

The paleoecology of deep-sea, benthic, macroinvertebrate communities is largely confined to the trace fossil record. While a few taxa have preservable hard parts, most of the deep-sea macrofauna are unpreservable as body fossils below the aragonite or calcite compensation depths. The ichnologic record provides important synecologic information regarding the behavioral diversity and endobenthic habitat partitioning of at least some community members.The deep-sea trace fossil record is strongly influenced by sediment composition (biogenic calcite vs. terrigenous clay), sedimentation regime (pelagic vs. turbidite deposition) and bioturbation history (continuous vs. discontinuous burrowing). These influences are directly reflected in the ichnofabric, or biogenic sedimentary fabric.Ichnofabrics of deep-sea sediments can shed light on the ecologic relationships of the infaunal community (trophic and tiering relationships), occupation of the sea floor by successive and different communities (deciphered from the different trace fossil suites in a composite ichnofabric), stability and firmness of the sedimentary substrate (revealed by burrow distinctness and deformation), interstitial oxygen conditions below the sea floor (determined from the abundance and preservation state of deposit-feeding burrows, such as Chondrites and Zoophycos), and effects of bioturbation patterns on early diagenetic processes (differential cementation and mineralization).The sedimentary habitat of the ancient deep-sea floor changes through time via compaction, dewatering, cementation and secondary mineralization. The benthos that inhabit this changing habitat likewise change according to their differing requirements for burrowing and endobenthic feeding. The resulting ichnofabric reflects a successive occupation of the sea floor by different types of organisms, ranging from shallow burrowers to deep burrowers to hard-substrate borers. Composite ichnofabrics thus can reveal a complex sequence of ecologic and diagenetic events.The tiered structure of infaunal communities in late Cretaceous and early Tertiary shelf-sea chalks is well-known, and because of their pelagic depositional aspect, these situations provide good analogues in outcrop for truly deep-sea environments. In the European and North American chalks, deeply emplaced fodinichnia (Thalassinoides, Chondrites and Zoophycos) typically are superimposed upon shallowly emplaced fodinichnia and pascichnia (Planolites and Teichichnus). Tracks and trails of epifaunal animals certainly were produced at the sediment-water interface, but they are not preserved. Very similar ichnofabrics occur in late Cretaceous and early Tertiary pelagic carbonates in New Zealand, where composite ichnofabrics reveal at least five main phases of occupation of the substrate by burrowers and borers. Multiple generations of Thalassinoides include both burrows and borings, each produced at different stages in the development of a major regional unconformity.Deep-sea pelagic deposits (in kilometers of water) represent a continuous accretion of the sea floor during sediment accumulation, accompanied by a continuous vertical shift of a tiered endobenthic community of burrowers that does not change appreciably over short time intervals. In partial contrast, shelf-sea pelagic deposits (in hundreds of meters of water) are affected more directly by short-term changes in bathymetry, salinity and oxygenation. The response of benthic communities to environmental shifts at the sea floor, therefore, is more pronounced in shelf-sea than in deep-sea settings.


Zootaxa ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 932 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
HARRY M. SAVAGE ◽  
R. WILLS FLOWERS ◽  
WENDY PORRAS V.

A new genus, Tikuna, is described based on recent collections of adults and nymphs of Choroterpes atramentum Traver from western Costa Rica. All recent collections are from streams on or near the Nicoya Complex, the oldest geological formation in Lower Central America. Tikuna belongs to a lineage of South American Atalophlebiinae (Leptophlebiidae: Ephemeroptera) whose origin is hypothesized to have been in the late Cretaceous–early Tertiary. Some implications of the distribution of Tikuna for theories on the origin of Costa Rica’s biota are discussed.


1991 ◽  
Vol 103 (10) ◽  
pp. 1297-1307 ◽  
Author(s):  
RALPH A. HAUGERUD ◽  
PETER VAN DER HEYDEN ◽  
ROWLAND W. TABOR ◽  
JOHN S. STACEY ◽  
ROBERT E. ZARTMAN

1986 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 1-46
Author(s):  
Ole Valdemar Vejbæk

The Lower Cretaceous sequence of the Danish Central Trough has been studied by the use of seismic stratigraphic analysis. The sequence has been subdivided into 6 seismic stratigraphic units named LCA, LCB, LCC, LCD, LCE and LCF. The studied area includes the Feda Graben, the Gertrud Graben (new name), the Tail End Graben, the Arne-Elin Graben (new name) and the Salt Dome Province, whereas the Grensen Nose and the Outer Rough Basin are not included. These basins are separated by the Inge High, the Mads High, the Gert Ridge (new name), the Manda! High, the Heno Plateau (new name) and the Pollerne Ridge (new name). The fault controlled subsidence of the Lower Cretaceous basins is claimed to have been governed by left lateral transtensional wrenching. This wrenching gradually ceased and gave way to regional subsidence with intermittent events of inversion resulting from right lateral transpressive wrenching in the Late Cretaceous and Early Tertiary. The first weak inversion is shown to have occurred in the Late Hauterivian. Sedimentation was influenced by a general gradual relative rise in sea-level starting with a low in the Volgian - Early Ryazanian times coeval with the deposition of the Farsund Formation and culminating in the Late Cretaceous. At the beginning of the Early Cretaceous gravity flow became an important depositional mechanism and resulted in preferred deposition in topographical lows, which were generated by simple tensional block-faulting or by wrench-induced, rapid local subsidence. As tectonic activity decreased and the elastic source areas became more remote and worn down, depocentres became less pronounced, especially with the last unit of the Lower Cretaceous.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Milsom ◽  
Phil Roach ◽  
Chris Toland ◽  
Don Riaroh ◽  
Chris Budden ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT As part of an ongoing exploration effort, approximately 4000 line-km of seismic data have recently been acquired and interpreted within the Comoros Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). Magnetic and gravity values were recorded along the seismic lines and have been integrated with pre-existing regional data. The combined data sets provide new constraints on the nature of the crust beneath the West Somali Basin (WSB), which was created when Africa broke away from Gondwanaland and began to move north. Despite the absence of clear sea-floor spreading magnetic anomalies or gravity anomalies defining a fracture zone pattern, the crust beneath the WSB has been generally assumed to be oceanic, based largely on regional reconstructions. However, inappropriate use of regional magnetic data has led to conclusions being drawn that are not supported by evidence. The identification of the exact location of the continent-ocean boundary (COB) is less simple than would at first sight appear and, in particular, recent studies have cast doubt on a direct correlation between the COB and the Davie Fracture Zone (DFZ). The new high-quality reflection seismic data have imaged fault patterns east of the DFZ more consistent with extended continental crust, and the accompanying gravity and magnetic surveys have shown that the crust in this area is considerably thicker than normal oceanic and that linear magnetic anomalies typical of sea-floor spreading are absent. Rifting in the basin was probably initiated in Karoo times but the generation of new oceanic crust may have been delayed until about 154 Ma, when there was a switch in extension direction from NW-SE to N-S. From then until about 120 Ma relative movement between Africa and Madagascar was accommodated by extension in the West Somali and Mozambique basins and transform motion along the DFZ that linked them. A new understanding of the WSB can be achieved by taking note of newly-emerging concepts and new data from adjacent areas. The better-studied Mozambique Basin, where comprehensive recent surveys have revealed an unexpectedly complex spreading history, may provide important analogues for some stages in WSB evolution. At the same time the importance of wide continent-ocean transition zones marked by the presence of hyper-extended continental crust has become widely recognised. We make use of these new insights in explaining the anomalous results from the southern WSB and in assessing the prospectivity of the Comoros EEZ.


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