Sequence Stratigraphy of Basal Oquirrh Group Caronates (Bashkirian) Thorpe Hills, Lake Mountain, Wasatch Front, Utah

The Early Pennsylvanian (Bashkirian/Morrowan) Bridal Veil Limestone of north-central Utah was deposited in the eastern portion of the rapidly subsiding Oquirrh basin. The 420 meter-thick Bridal Veil Limestone displays distinct cyclicity formed by stacked, meter to decameter scale high-frequency sequ...

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Main Author: Derenthal, Andrew D.
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/2705
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3704&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-37042021-09-01T05:01:59Z Sequence Stratigraphy of Basal Oquirrh Group Caronates (Bashkirian) Thorpe Hills, Lake Mountain, Wasatch Front, Utah Derenthal, Andrew D. The Early Pennsylvanian (Bashkirian/Morrowan) Bridal Veil Limestone of north-central Utah was deposited in the eastern portion of the rapidly subsiding Oquirrh basin. The 420 meter-thick Bridal Veil Limestone displays distinct cyclicity formed by stacked, meter to decameter scale high-frequency sequences and their constituent parasequences. Though no one ideal cycle may be defined for the Bridal Veil Limestone, each high-frequency sequence and parasequence contains a general shallowing upward trend that ranges from anaerobic to dysaerobic mudstone at the base to skeletal wackestone to mud-dominated packstone, capped by heterozoan grain-rich carbonates or siliciclastic tidalites. Cycles bounded by exposure surfaces, indicated by micro-brecciation, rhizoliths, laminated calcite or silica crusts, rip-up clasts, centimeter-scale teepee structures, and/or pronounced erosional relief are termed high-frequency sequences. Those bounded by marine flooding surfaces are defined as parasequences. Thusly defined, the Bridal Veil Limestone is divided into 25 high-frequency sequences designated BVL-1 through BVL-25. Overall, two distinct sets of high-frequency sequences may be observed in the Bridal Veil Limestone. Sequences comprising the lower half of the formation (BVL-1 through BVL-12) are thicker, muddier, and less sand-prone than sequences in the upper half of the formation (BVL-13 through BVL-25), indicating an overall change in oxygenation, depositional texture, and accommodation upward in the section. Tracing of key beds and surfaces between the Thorpe Hills, Lake Mountain, and the Wasatch Range (spanning a distance greater than 50 miles) reveals that deposition was remarkably uniform across the southeastern part of the Oquirrh basin which we herein designate the Bridal Veil sub-basin and distinct from coeval formations in the southern Oquirrh basin, Ely basin, and Wyoming shelf. Mudstone and wackestone textures comprise a large portion of the formation by volume. Grain-rich carbonates are almost exclusively heterozoan in composition, indicating that the sub-basin was subphotic to aphotic through Early Pennsylvanian time. 2011-11-10T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/2705 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3704&context=etd http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive Bridal Veil Limestone West Canyon Limestone Thorpe Hills Lake Mountain Wasatch Range Bashkirian Oquirrh Group Morrowan Early Pennsylvanian Sequence Stratigraphy Microfacies sub-basin Geology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Bridal Veil Limestone
West Canyon Limestone
Thorpe Hills
Lake Mountain
Wasatch Range
Bashkirian
Oquirrh Group
Morrowan
Early Pennsylvanian
Sequence Stratigraphy
Microfacies
sub-basin
Geology
spellingShingle Bridal Veil Limestone
West Canyon Limestone
Thorpe Hills
Lake Mountain
Wasatch Range
Bashkirian
Oquirrh Group
Morrowan
Early Pennsylvanian
Sequence Stratigraphy
Microfacies
sub-basin
Geology
Derenthal, Andrew D.
Sequence Stratigraphy of Basal Oquirrh Group Caronates (Bashkirian) Thorpe Hills, Lake Mountain, Wasatch Front, Utah
description The Early Pennsylvanian (Bashkirian/Morrowan) Bridal Veil Limestone of north-central Utah was deposited in the eastern portion of the rapidly subsiding Oquirrh basin. The 420 meter-thick Bridal Veil Limestone displays distinct cyclicity formed by stacked, meter to decameter scale high-frequency sequences and their constituent parasequences. Though no one ideal cycle may be defined for the Bridal Veil Limestone, each high-frequency sequence and parasequence contains a general shallowing upward trend that ranges from anaerobic to dysaerobic mudstone at the base to skeletal wackestone to mud-dominated packstone, capped by heterozoan grain-rich carbonates or siliciclastic tidalites. Cycles bounded by exposure surfaces, indicated by micro-brecciation, rhizoliths, laminated calcite or silica crusts, rip-up clasts, centimeter-scale teepee structures, and/or pronounced erosional relief are termed high-frequency sequences. Those bounded by marine flooding surfaces are defined as parasequences. Thusly defined, the Bridal Veil Limestone is divided into 25 high-frequency sequences designated BVL-1 through BVL-25. Overall, two distinct sets of high-frequency sequences may be observed in the Bridal Veil Limestone. Sequences comprising the lower half of the formation (BVL-1 through BVL-12) are thicker, muddier, and less sand-prone than sequences in the upper half of the formation (BVL-13 through BVL-25), indicating an overall change in oxygenation, depositional texture, and accommodation upward in the section. Tracing of key beds and surfaces between the Thorpe Hills, Lake Mountain, and the Wasatch Range (spanning a distance greater than 50 miles) reveals that deposition was remarkably uniform across the southeastern part of the Oquirrh basin which we herein designate the Bridal Veil sub-basin and distinct from coeval formations in the southern Oquirrh basin, Ely basin, and Wyoming shelf. Mudstone and wackestone textures comprise a large portion of the formation by volume. Grain-rich carbonates are almost exclusively heterozoan in composition, indicating that the sub-basin was subphotic to aphotic through Early Pennsylvanian time.
author Derenthal, Andrew D.
author_facet Derenthal, Andrew D.
author_sort Derenthal, Andrew D.
title Sequence Stratigraphy of Basal Oquirrh Group Caronates (Bashkirian) Thorpe Hills, Lake Mountain, Wasatch Front, Utah
title_short Sequence Stratigraphy of Basal Oquirrh Group Caronates (Bashkirian) Thorpe Hills, Lake Mountain, Wasatch Front, Utah
title_full Sequence Stratigraphy of Basal Oquirrh Group Caronates (Bashkirian) Thorpe Hills, Lake Mountain, Wasatch Front, Utah
title_fullStr Sequence Stratigraphy of Basal Oquirrh Group Caronates (Bashkirian) Thorpe Hills, Lake Mountain, Wasatch Front, Utah
title_full_unstemmed Sequence Stratigraphy of Basal Oquirrh Group Caronates (Bashkirian) Thorpe Hills, Lake Mountain, Wasatch Front, Utah
title_sort sequence stratigraphy of basal oquirrh group caronates (bashkirian) thorpe hills, lake mountain, wasatch front, utah
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2011
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/2705
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3704&context=etd
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