Oolite Facies as a Transitional Unit in Deepening-Upward Carbonate Sequences in Atoll, Seamount, and Guyot Settings in Pacific Basin
S. O. Schlanger
Prior to 1968, ooids had not been described from shallow-water
carbonate
complexes deposited in atoll, seamount, or guyot settings in the Pacific basin.
This apparent lack of an oolite facies in the Pacific was puzzling, considering
the abundance of ooids in modern Bahamian settings and in the Phanerozoic record
in general. Since 1968, Deep Sea Drilling Project operations, marine seismic
stratigraphic studies, dredging on drowned atolls, and field studies of an
emergent atoll have revealed the presence of a Cretaceous oolite limestone atop
Ita Maitai Guyot, Paleocene ooids on Koko Seamount, late Paleocene to middle
Eocene ooids on Ojin Seamount, Eocene ooids on Harrie Guyot, and Holocene oolite
limestone on Malden Island. At Ita Maitai Guyot the oolite limestone overlies
normal lagoon sediments and is overlain by deep-
water
pelagic carbonate. At
Malden Island, which is an emergent atoll, 3,550-year-old oolite limestone
overlies a 125,000-year-old reef complex. At Harrie Guyot and at Koko and Ojin
Seamounts, ooids are associated with drowned atoll reef and lagoon omplexes. The
paleolatitude of deposition of the oolite facies lay between 5°S and 18°N. In
these settings the formation of the oolite facies was apparently related to a
rapid rise in sea level that caused flooding of an antecedent reef complex which
failed to keep up with the rise in sea level. In Pacific basin environments the
oolite facies is a minor and temporally ephemeral one which accounts for its
scarcity
in the stratigraphic record from this region.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91038©1987 AAPG Annual Convention, Los Angeles, California, June 7-10, 1987.