2007
DOI: 10.2110/jsr.2007.021
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Tectonic Control on the Sequence Stratigraphy of Nonmarine Retroarc Foreland Basin Fills: Insights from the Upper Jurassic of Central Utah, U.S.A.

Abstract: Continental successions of the North American Western Interior retroarc foreland basin provide an excellent opportunity to evaluate the tectonic controls on nonmarine sequence stratigraphy. The transition between the Upper Jurassic Brushy Basin Member anastomosed fluvial system of the Morrison Formation and the gravelly braided-river deposits of the Buckhorn Conglomerate has been studied to assess the dispersal of coarse clastics and the development of associated basin-wide unconformities in a sequence stratig… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…In particular, a detrital zircon sample from the basal conglomeratic sandstone yielded two grains with Hauterivian ages (131.6 ± 4.5 and 133.5 ± 1.8 Ma), providing a maximum possible age for this interval. These data confl ict with recent suggestions by Roca and Nadon (2007) for continuous deposition between the Morrison Formation and the overlying conglomeratic beds, and the proposition that the K-1 unconformity is higher in the section. A detrital zircon sample from the upper part of the Kootenai contained a population of euhedral crystals that yielded early Albian ages, refl ecting syndepositional volcanism.…”
Section: Lower Cretaceoussupporting
confidence: 85%
“…In particular, a detrital zircon sample from the basal conglomeratic sandstone yielded two grains with Hauterivian ages (131.6 ± 4.5 and 133.5 ± 1.8 Ma), providing a maximum possible age for this interval. These data confl ict with recent suggestions by Roca and Nadon (2007) for continuous deposition between the Morrison Formation and the overlying conglomeratic beds, and the proposition that the K-1 unconformity is higher in the section. A detrital zircon sample from the upper part of the Kootenai contained a population of euhedral crystals that yielded early Albian ages, refl ecting syndepositional volcanism.…”
Section: Lower Cretaceoussupporting
confidence: 85%
“…2 and 5). A prominent calcrete paleosol separates Buckhorn Conglomerate from the remainder of the Cedar Mountain Formation (Currie, 1998), suggesting that the Buckhorn might represent a closing phase of Morrison sedimentation (Roca and Nadon, 2007), and an analogous calcrete horizon overlies basal sandstone bodies of the Burro Canyon Formation (Aubrey, 1998). The Buckhorn Conglomerate Member extends eastward, however, past an arbitrary change in nomenclature at the Green River, into the Poison Strip Sandstone Member, which overlies the Yellow Cat Member containing Early Cretaceous (Barremian) dinosaur remains (Kirkland and others, 1997;Kirkland and Madsen, 2007).…”
Section: Cedar Mountain-burro Canyon Formationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Subaerial exposure due to sea-level fall causes pedogenesis and erosion of early deposited marine sediments, especially in coincidence of interfluvial sequence boundaries (Van Wagoner et al, 1990;Aitken and Flint, 1996;McCarthy and Plint, 1998;Roca and Nadon, 2007).…”
Section: Generation Of Chemical Grainsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The development of basin-wide unconformities due to active tectonics is commonly accompanied by deposition of sand units that differ markedly in composition, and different petrofacies may permit the characterization of each sequence in terms of both clastic constituents and provenance (Arribas et al, 2003). Compositional changes at sequence-bounding unconformities generally mark abrupt paleodrainage reorganization in response to tectonic uplift (Ryu and Niem, 1999;Roca and Nadon, 2007;Vezzoli and Garzanti, 2009). In terms of sequence stratigraphy, changes in arenite composition at sequence boundaries are likely to be recorded (i) at the basin margin, by sharp petrofacies changes within fluvial and transgressive estuarine to littoral and shelfal sand bodies directly overlying the subaerial unconformity, (ii) in deep-water settings, at the base of thick successions of falling-stage turbidites (correlative conformity), in association with diagnostic changes in lithofacies patterns (e.g., abrupt increase in the sandstone to shale ratio).…”
Section: Compositional Change Across Sequence Boundarymentioning
confidence: 99%