--> The Extent of Individual Hyperpycnal-Flow Beds in the Cretaceous Panther Tongue Delta, Utah, USA

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The Extent of Individual Hyperpycnal-Flow Beds in the Cretaceous Panther Tongue Delta, Utah, USA*
By

Cornel Olariu1, Ron J. Steel1, and Andrew L. Petter1

Search and Discovery Article #50071 (2008)
Posted
May 15, 2008

*Adapted from extended abstract prepared for AAPG Hedberg Conference, “Sediment Transfer from Shelf to Deepwater – Revisiting the Delivery Mechanisms,” March 3-7, 2008 – Ushuaia-Patagonia, Argentina

1Jackson school of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas ([email protected])



Introduction

The distance over which river-generated hyperpycnal flows travel on the shelf and the extent of the resultant deposits are not well documented. The geometry and thickness of the beds are a reflection of the hyperpycnal-flow plume behavior. River-generated hyperpycnal flows will expand off the river mouths because of the lack of confinement and bottom friction. In this paper we document the extent and thickness variation of the individual hyperpycnal beds of the Cretaceous Panther Tongue Delta, Utah. Our data show that thick (meter) sandstone beds thin to decimeters over a surprisingly short distance, typically less than 1 km. After the initial abrupt dipping and thinning, the cm-thin sandstone beds can be followed for longer distances (hundreds of meters) with no significant thickness variation.




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uPanther Tongue


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 







 




uIntroduction

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uPanther Tongue


Figure Captions

Figure 1. Panther Tongue outcrop belt in central Utah, USA. The study area is indicated by the red rectangle north-northwest of Price.

Figure 2. Sedimentary facies that indicate deposition from river-derived hyperpycnal flows. A. Meter-thick intervals of flat-laminated fine sandstone. B- Intra-bed grain-size variation from fine to medium sandstone. C. Intra-bed alternations of ripple lamination – plane parallel lamination – ripple lamination. D. Intra-bed alternations of plane parallel lamination – structureless – plane parallel lamination.

Figure 3. Dip-oriented sketch of the Panther Tongue delta deposits preserved in the outcrops studied. The thick proximal beds dip at a higher angle and also thin at a faster rate than more distal thinner sandstone beds.


Panther Tongue Sandstone

Panther Tongue Sandstone, a regressive sandstone wedge of late Campanian age, crops out in Central Utah, in the Book Cliffs area (Figure 1).

The Panther Tongue succession has a coarsening- and thickening-upward trend and is about 30 m thick. Based on the sedimentary facies, the deposits are interpreted as fluvial- dominated delta deposits. At the base of the succession the beds are composed of siltstones alternating with cm-thick very fine sandstones. The basal thin beds are overlain by dm- to m-thick sandstones alternating with thin (cm to dm) siltstones. The top of the succession has a series of thick (>1 meter) amalgamated sandstone beds. Erosional surfaces between sandstone beds, especially in the upper part of the succession, are common. Sedimentary structures that indicate hyperpycnal flows are: unusually thick intervals  (>1 meter) of plane-parallel lamination in the sandstone beds and thick beds containing rippled to parallel-laminated to rippled, or massive to parallel laminated to massive, in the same bed (Figure 2).

The Panther Tongue outcrops have kilometers of lateral continuity and individual beds can be mapped laterally. Individual sandstone beds were mapped using photomosaics and LIDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) data. The bedding diagram oriented down the depositional dip indicates that the beds are continuous over the extent of the outcrop (> 1 km) and dip southward; i.e., in the downcurrent direction. The thick sandstone beds dip basinward at about 2.5 degrees and thin at a rate of 0.5/100 from meters to decimeters over a distance of hundreds of meters. The cm-thick beds were difficult to map, but these were observed to have relative constant thickness and gentle dips over hundreds of meters in both dip and strike depositional directions (Figure 3).

The geometry and thickness of the Panther Tongue beds are indicators of the hyperpycnal flow plume behavior. The hyperpycnal flows that are river generated will expand off the river mouths because of the lack of confinement and the bottom friction. A modern analog of Panther Tongue Delta might be the Yellow River Delta in China. In Bohai Bay hyperpycnal plumes were observed in front of the modern Yellow River. The Yellow River hyperpycnal flows extend down the delta front and stop at the base of the delta front where the gradient decreases. Our data on Panther Tongue beds suggest a basin setting analogous with Bohai Bay, with relatively shallow-water depth (tens of meters) where the hyperpycnal flows expanded and stopped in a short distance off the river mouth. 

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