During the middle Albian, a southward incursion of the Boreal Ocean flooded northern Alberta and adjacent British Columbia, forming a large embayment known as the Hulcross Sea. Marine mudstones of the Hulcross Formation and Harmon Member of the Peace River Formation record transgression, whereas sandstones of the Cadotte Member of the Peace River Formation record shoreline regression to the north. Abundant hummocky and swaley lamination in the Cadotte sandstone attest to the influence of storms on a shallow shelf. The Cadotte sandstone undergoes a lateral facies change from mud-free shoreface sandstone in the south to heterolithic offshore facies in the north. An articulated crinoid was found within a hummocky sandstone bed about 15 km seaward (north) of the shoreface-shelf facies transition. The articulated state of the crinoid indicates that it was buried very rapidly, and never exhumed. The arms through 20 mm of the column are preserved, but because the details of the aboral cup are not well preserved, this specimen must be left in open nomenclature. The elliptical columnals with a concave latus in the distal portion of the preserved column ally this specimen to the Bourgueticrinida, although with details of the aboral cup lacking and other characters atypical for Mesozoic bourgueticrinids, the Canadian specimen is placed in Bathycrinidae indeterminate. The oldest previously recorded bathycrinids were from the Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian), thus this report extends their range to the Lower Cretaceous (Albian).
Regional mapping of Middle Albian, shallow-marine clastic strata over ca 100 000 km 2 of the Western Canada Foreland Basin was undertaken to investigate the relationship between large-scale stratal architecture and lithology. Results suggest that, over ca 5 Myr, stratal geometry and facies were dynamically linked to tectonic activity in the adjacent Cordillera. Higher frequency modulation of accommodation is most reasonably ascribed to eustasy. The Harmon and Cadotte alloformations were deposited at the southern end of an embayment of the Arctic Ocean. The Harmon alloformation, forming the lower part of the succession, constitutes a wedge of marine mudstone that thickens westward over 400 km from <5 m near the forebulge to >150 m in the foredeep. Constituent allomembers are also wedge-shaped but lack distinct clinothems, a rollover point or downlapping geometry. Ubiquitous wave ripples indicate that the sea floor lay above storm wave base. Deposition took place on an extremely low-gradient ramp, where accommodation was limited by effective wave base. Lobate, river-dominated deltas fringed the southern margin of the basin. The largest deltas are stacked in the same area, suggesting protracted stability of the feeder river. A buried palaeo-valley on the underlying sub-Cretaceous unconformity may have influenced compaction and controlled river location for ca 3 Myr. Adjacent to the western Cordillera, a predominantly mudstone succession is interbedded with abundant storm beds of very fine-grained sandstone and siltstone that reflect supply from the adjacent orogen. Bioturbation indices in the Harmon alloformation range from zero to six which reflects the influence of stressors related to river-mouth proximity. Harmon alloformation mudstone grades abruptly upward into marine sandstone and conglomerate of the overlying Cadotte alloformation. The Cadotte is composed of three allomembers 'CA' to 'CC', that represent the deposits of prograding strandplains 200 9 300 km in extent. Allomembers 'CA' and 'CB' are strongly sandstone-dominated, whereas allomember 'CC' contains abundant conglomerate in the west. The dominantly aggradational wedge of Harmon alloformation mudstone records flexural subsidence driven by active thickening in the adjacent orogen: the high accommodation rate trapped coarser clastic detritus close to the basin margin. In contrast, the tabular, highly progradational sandstone and conglomerate bodies of the Cadotte alloformation record a low subsidence rate, implying tectonic quiescence in the adjacent orogen. Erosional unloading of the orogen through Cadotte time steepened rivers to the extent that they delivered gravel to the shore. These observations support an 'anti-tectonic' model of gravel supply proposed previously for the United States portion of the Cretaceous foreland basin. Because Cadotte allomembers do not thicken appreciably into the foredeep, accommodation changes that controlled these transgressive-regressive successions were probably of eustatic origin.
In north‐central Alberta and adjacent British Columbia, clastic strata of the middle to late Albian Peace River and Shaftesbury formations were deposited in alluvial to shallow‐marine environments across the foredeep of the Western Canada Foreland Basin. A high‐resolution, log and core‐based allostratigraphic framework for the Paddy Member of the Peace River Formation established nine allomembers, PA to PI, bounded by flooding surfaces and apparently equivalent non‐marine surfaces. Within the estimated 2 Myr. duration of the Paddy, allomembers allow the evolving palaeogeography and changing relationship between accommodation and sedimentation rates to be analysed on time‐steps on the order of 105 years. Paddy strata fill an arcuate depocentre ca 300 km wide, across which the rocks thin eastward from 125 m to ca 5 to 10 m. The northern part of the basin is occupied by muddy, offshore marine deposits that pass abruptly southward into a linear, WSW‐ENE‐trending body of sandstone deposited in a wave‐dominated barrier‐strandplain, at least 350 km long. Extending >200 km to the south of the strandplain was a region of shallow brackish to freshwater lagoons and lakes that graded to the SW into alluvial facies. Within the lagoon region, few‐m thick, elongate and patchy sandstones represent river‐dominated deltas. In allomembers PA to PG, these sandstones are concentrated in the west and south, implying supply from the western Cordillera. In allomembers PH and PI, sandstones are mainly in the east and have a distinctive, quartz‐rich composition. They can be correlated eastward into the coeval Pelican Formation, and were sourced probably from the Canadian Shield on the opposite side of the basin. In the western foredeep, alluvial rocks comprise aggradational, unconfined floodplain deposits with ribbon sandstones, dissected, on at least nine separate levels, by palaeovalleys that are confined to the proximal foredeep. Valleys are 10 to 30 m deep, few km wide, and filled with multi‐storey channel‐bars of pebbly coarse sandstone or conglomerate. Valleys cut down from well‐developed interfluve palaeosols that record a falling and then rising water table. Alternating aggradation and degradation, and advance and retreat of the alluvial gravel front is attributed to cycles of varying rainfall intensity, rather than tectonism or eustasy. Apparently, coeval transgressive‐regressive successions in the lagoon and marine regions are attributed to few‐m scale eustatic changes. On the NE margin of the basin, tidal sandstone fills a northward‐opening estuary cut on the basal Paddy unconformity. This sandstone contains the first well‐documented specimens of Gnesioceramus comancheanus (Cragin), proving contemporaneity with at least part of the marine Joli Fou Formation to the east. Paddy allomembers change shape upward from short blunt wedges, through more acutely tapered wedges, to sheets. This change reflects initially rapid flexural subsidence, attributed to active thickening of the adjacent orogenic wedge. A waning rate of def...
An echinoderm association is reported from the ?early late Albian Paddy Member of the Peace River Formation of British Columbia, Canada. The association includes Frasericrinus mauricensis gen. et sp. nov., two additional distinctive crinoid column types, a poorly preserved asteroid, and an umbilical fragment of the cephalopod Stelckiceras. This is the first report of a Cretaceous isocrinid from North America. The echinoderm fossils are from the top of a succession of storm-deposited sandstones and mudstones (Boulder Creek Formation) that can be correlated southward into nearshore and terrestrial facies of the Paddy Member of the Peace River Formation. The echinoderm fossils were buried (and probably lived) about 12-14 km from the contemporaneous shoreline in an estimated water depth of 10-20 m. Integration of biostratigraphic and allostratigraphic schemes suggests that the echinoderms are of earliest late Albian age. The association of the echinoderm fauna with ammonites of Boreal affinity indicates deposition in northern waters, although the presence of Tethyan inoceramids in apparently coeval Paddy Member strata 270 km to the east suggests that northward-advancing water from the Gulf of Mexico had reached northwestern Alberta, if not actually merged with the Boreal embayment. The nearshore occurrence of Cretaceous stalked crinoids is indicative of an asynchronous, gradual migration of stalked crinoids to deep-water habitats, to which they are restricted in modern oceans. Résumé :Une association d'échinodermes est signalée du Membre de Paddy du ?début de l'Albien tardif de la Formation de Peace River, en Colombie-Britannique (Canada). L'association comprend Frasericrinus mauricensis gen. et sp. nov., deux autres types de colonnes de crinoïde distinctives, un astéride mal préservé et un fragment ombilical du céphalopode Stelckiceras. Il s'agit du premier signalement d'un isocrinidé d'âge crétacé en Amérique du Nord. Les fossiles d'échinodermes proviennent du haut d'une séquence de grès et de mudstones déposés par des tempêtes (Formation de Boulder Creek) qui peuvent être corrélés vers le sud aux faciès littoraux et terrestres du Membre de Paddy de la Formation de Peace River. Les fossiles d'échinodermes ont été ensevelis (et ont probablement vécu) à environ de 12 à 14 km de la côte contemporaine dans des eaux d'une profondeur estimée de 10 à 20 m. L'intégration de schémas biostratigraphiques et allostratigraphiques donne à penser que les échinodermes sont du tout début de l'Albien tardif. L'association de la faune à échinodermes avec des ammonites d'affinité boréale indique un dépôt dans des eaux septentrionales, bien que la présence d'inocéramidés téthysiens dans des strates apparemment contemporaines du Membre de Paddy, à 270 km à l'est, donne à penser que des eaux s'avançant vers le nord à partir du golfe du Mexique avaient atteint le nord-ouest de l'Alberta et avaient même peut-être rejoint l'échancrure boréale. La présence en milieu littoral de crinoïdes pédonculés d'âge crétacé indique une migration asynchr...
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