SIMULTANEOUS
CARBONATE
PLATFORM PROGRADATION AND DROWNING, LISBURNE GROUP,
EASTERN AND CENTRAL BROOKS RANGE, ALASKA
WHALEN, Michael T., Geology and Geophysics, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK 99775, [email protected], DUMOULIN, Julie, U.S. Geol Survey, 4200 University Dr, Anchorage, AK 99508, LUKASIK, Jeff J., Petro-Canada Oil and Gas, P.O. Box 2844, Calgary, AB T2P 3E3, Canada, and WHITE, Jesse G., Dept. of Geology & Geophysics, Univ. of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK 99775
The Carboniferous Lisburne Group generally deepens from a
carbonate
ramp
(northeast) to basin (southwest) across northern Alaska and records at least
five third-order depositional
sequences
in the eastern (EBR) and central Brooks
Range (CBR).
Sequences
1-3 (Osagean-Meramecian) indicate similar depositional
histories along strike but facies stacking patterns in overlying
sequences
4-5
(late Meramecian-Pennsylvanian) differ sharply. In the EBR, sequence 4 (~250 m)
records platform backstepping followed by progradation of shoal environments
over the outer ramp (upper Alapah Limestone). In the CBR, a 30-m-thick interval
of organic-rich shales and phosphorites at the base of sequence 4 (total
thickness ~160 m) implies a significant oceanographic change that resulted in
upwelling and simultaneous drowning of the central Lisburne ramp. Overlying
shallowing-upward
cycles
never shoal much above fair-weather wave base. Sequence
5 was initiated by latest Chesterian transgression. In the EBR, it consists of
dominantly shallow-water prograding strata (Wahoo Limestone ~250 m). In the CBR,
coeval high-frequency
cycles
of deep-water
carbonate
mudstone, glauconitic
packstone, black shale, and spiculite (~ 40 m) indicate complete platform
drowning.
The thin succession, high phosphate content, and gamma ray signature of
lowermost sequence 4 (CBR) implies considerable condensation. Nutrification
associated with marine upwelling likely played a role in the demise of the
carbonate
platform. However, the lack of overlying phosphatic or organic-rich
intervals and the low accumulation rates for sequence 5 carbonates imply that
subsidence-enhanced rates of relative
sea
level
rise might have facilitated
platform drowning. Regional geologic evidence suggests that the abrupt late
Meramecian deepening, initiation of marine upwelling, and eventual platform
drowning in the CBR was tectonically controlled. Additional evidence for late
Meramecian-early Chesterian tectonism includes basalt flows in the eastern
Brooks Range and sediment-hosted massive sulfides in the western Brooks Range.
Down-dropping of the central Brooks Range area along reactivated extensional
structures could explain the concurrent volcanism and subsidence that resulted
in marine upwelling and eventual drowning of the central Lisburne ramp.