--> ABSTRACT: High-Frequency Relative Sea Level Fluctuations: Evidence from Skeletal Limestone Deposits, Western Interior Cretaceous, by B. B. Sageman, A. E. Murphy, B. Van Mooy, E. G. Kauffman; #91020 (1995).
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High-Previous HitFrequencyNext Hit Relative Sea Level Fluctuations: Evidence from Skeletal Limestone Deposits, Western Interior Cretaceous

B. B. Sageman, A. E. Murphy, B. Van Mooy, E. G. Kauffman

High-resolution stratigraphic analyses have demonstrated correlation of basinal limestone-marlstone units thought to represent Milankovitch cycles to shoreface parasequences in Cenomanian-Turonian strata of the Greenhorn Formation, Western Interior basin. Although high-Previous HitfrequencyNext Hit sea level fluctuations would provide an effective mechanism for linkage of these depositional systems, the sea level hypothesis is difficult to verify. In addition to problems in documenting short-term eustatic changes in actively subsiding forelands, the widely held view of a relatively ice-free mid-Cretaceous world removes the most effective driver of high-Previous HitfrequencyNext Hit sea level fluctuation (although some climate modellers suggest alternate views). Recently, detailed analyses of fine-grained basina facies in the Western Interior has resulted in development of new depositional models for interpreting high-Previous HitfrequencyNext Hit sea level fluctuations. Skeletal limestones are an important component of these depositional models because they preserve abundant primary sedimentologic data. Cenomanian-Turonian skeletal limestones can be grouped into 3 main categories: 1) thinly bedded to amalgamated, planar to cross-stratified units representing wave-winnowed accumulations; 2) massive to graded beds with rippled tops representing tempestite or turbidite-type deposits; and 3) thin, homogenous to planarbedded units representing starvation surfaces. Analysis of sedimentary structures, grain size variations and lateral thickness trends, and onshore-offshore correlation, suggests that deposition is relate to high-Previous HitfrequencyTop sea level fluctuation. The type of deposit varies based on position within long-term sea level cycles (i.e., 2nd-order Greenhorn Cycle) and location within an onshore-offshore transect.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91020©1995 AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, May 5-8, 1995