SEDIMENTOLOGY OF THE "COBBLESTONE SANDSTONE" OF THE FORTRESS MOUNTAIN FORMATION, CENTRAL NORTH SLOPE, ALASKA
SCHENK, Christopher J., U.S. Geological Survey, P.O Box 25046, MS 939, Denver, CO 80225, [email protected] and HOUSEKNECHT, David W., U.S. Geological Survey, MS 956 National Center, Reston, VA 20192
The "Cobblestone sandstone" (informal) of the Fortress Mountain Formation was
deposited during Aptian(?) time in the proximal foredeep of the Colville Basin.
At Cobblestone Creek, several structurally dismembered sections display a
variety of turbidite facies. One 130-m thick partial section comprises at least
six depositional units composed of turbidite sandstones and massive to graded
sandstones with little mudstone. Depositional units are dominated by solitary to
amalgamated sandstones 0.5 to 4 m thick exhibiting massive to graded, coarse- to
fine-grained
Bouma
A facies with basal flute casts and other sole marks with an
east to northeast paleocurrent direction. Some beds contain sequences with
Bouma
A, B, and C divisions (massive to parallel laminated to ripple laminated). One
section includes up to 15 m of channelized, cobble- to boulder conglomerate.
Collectively, these sandstones and conglomerates on Cobblestone Creek might
represent a succession of proximal-fan turbidites. Most of the turbidite section
at Cobblestone Creek is oil bearing, and the oil was typed as having a possible
source from the Shublik Formation. Near Toolik Lake, a 100-m thick partial
section of the Cobblestone sandstone exhibits a proximal succession of
amalgamated cobble- and boulder-bearing channel deposits with clasts up to 1m
that have cut into thinner, massive to graded
Bouma
A turbidites and thin-bedded
turbidites. This section might represent slope or proximal fan-channel
conglomerates. Given the grain size of the Cobblestone sandstone and its
possible distribution in the subsurface, the Cobblestone sandstone might be a
potential petroleum reservoir in the Foothills area of the central North Slope.