--> ABSTRACT: Sea Level Control on Platform and Basin Development, Upper Devonian of Western Canada, by David J. McLean; #91003 (1990).
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ABSTRACT: Previous HitSeaNext Hit Previous HitLevelNext Hit Control on Platform and Basin Development, Upper Devonian of Western Canada

David J. McLean

The geometric and sedimentologic relationships between buildup margins and their flanking basin sediments in the Rocky Mountains suggest that Previous HitsuperimposedNext Hit short-term and long-term Previous HitseaNext Hit Previous HitlevelNext Hit fluctuations controlled buildup stratigraphy. Preliminary correlation of cycle stacking patterns from one margin to another reveals an ordered hierarchy of possibly three magnitudes of Previous HitseaNext Hit Previous HitlevelNext Hit change: tentatively fifth, fourth, and third order.

The Flume platform and overlying upper Cairn biostrome consist of meter-scale shallowing-upward Previous HitcyclesNext Hit. These Previous HitcyclesNext Hit are interpreted to have been deposited during short-term high-frequency (fifth-order?) Previous HitseaNext Hit Previous HitlevelNext Hit oscillations. Previous HitSuperimposedNext Hit on this high-frequency cyclicity are larger, broadly shallowing-upward trends in which dominantly subtidal meter-scale Previous HitcyclesNext Hit gradually pass upward into peritidal Previous HitcyclesNext Hit of comparable thickness. These intermediate Previous HitcyclesNext Hit (tens of meters thick) may represent fourth-order eustasy. The Flume, upper Cairn, and overlying Peechee members, together with their time-equivalent basin-filling strata, represent low-frequency, third-order depositional sequences. The various Previous HitcyclesNext Hit are best developed in the Main Ranges, where greater subsidence allowed for incre sed sediment accumulation.

Abrupt margins are common to all localities investigated. At least three major episodes of fourth-order Previous HitseaNext Hit Previous HitlevelNext Hit rise (backstepping), punctuated by relative stillstands (prograding tongues of stromatoporoid rudstone into Perdrix basin shales), dominated middle Frasnian Peechee sedimentation. Pervasive dolomitization prohibits resolution of finer scale Previous HitcyclesTop. Onlap of the Peechee buildup margins by overlying Mt. Hawk argillaceous limestones and shales indicates an important basin-filling episode during a probable stillstand and/or lowering.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91003©1990 AAPG Annual Convention, San Francisco, California, June 3-6, 1990