COMBINING
MAGNETIC
SUSCEPTIBILITY WITH TRADITIONAL LITHOSTRATIGRAPHY,
BIOSTRATIGRAPHY, AND SEQUENCE STRATIGRAPHY TO IMPROVE THE STRATIGRAPHIC
RESOLUTION OF UPPER DEVONIAN CARBONATES IN WESTERN CANADA
MISSLER, Rebecca J., Geology & Geophysics, University of Alaska Fairbanks, P.O. BOX 755780, Fairbanks, AK 99775-5780, [email protected] and WHALEN, Michael T., Geology & Geophysics, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK 99775-5780
The Frasnian-Famennian boundary represents one of the most significant biotic
crises of the Phanerozoic and is well exposed in rock outcrops in Eastern
British Columbia. These Upper Devonian carbonate platforms are also significant
petroleum reservoirs with related basinal source rocks. Various causes for the
demise of a wide range of benthic and primarily low-latitude
stromatoporoid-coral reefs and pelagic organisms have been suggested but none
have proven undisputable. In this project we combine litho-, bio-, sequence, and
magnetic
susceptibility stratigraphy to better understand the pattern and timing
of platform (reservoir) development.
While carbonate platforms are able to keep up with most sea level change
through aggradation and progradation, basinal settings generally lag behind due
to a lack in sedimentation leaving a bypass or erosional margin in the rock
record making stratigraphic correlation difficult. While biostratigraphy is
used, it is not always helpful due to the lack of diagnostic conodont species in
platform environments and the limited biostratigraphic resolution of
stromatoporoids, rugose corals, or brachiopods. Clearly another technique is
required in order to gain a better understanding of the depositional
environments and the timing of events in the Late Devonian.
Magnetic
susceptibility stratigraphy provides a means to analyze the timing of
depositional events in the Late Devonian to a higher degree of accuracy. With
marine regressions comes an increase in erosion resulting in an influx of
terrigenous material into the carbonate dominated areas. The continentally
derived debris has a greater
magnetic
susceptibility than the dominantly
diamagnetic carbonate material. By comparing the
magnetic
susceptibility signals
from coeval locales we will be able to correlate across basins and with other
basins around the world.
The combination of biostratigraphy, lithostratigraphy, sequence stratigraphy,
and
magnetic
susceptibility will improve the stratigraphic resolution of
carbonate platforms and in doing so will increase our understanding of the
depositional environments, the timing of events, and the controls on source and
reservoir rock deposition in the Late Devonian. This will also further our
understanding into the pattern and timing of extinctions at the F-F boundary.