Regional implications of an extensive linear sediment-dispersal system along western margin of Cretaceous interior seaway
Conference
·
OSTI ID:6084296
The Second Wall Creek sand in the Powder River basin in Johnson and Natrona Counties is similar in clast lithology, primary sedimentary structures, and facies association to the Torchlight Sandstone at the top of the Frontier Formation in the northern Big Horn basin. The Second Wall Creek sand is predominantly composed of medium to coarse-grained, moderately sorted massive to cross-bedded quartz-lithic wacke with a minor amount of carbonaceous shale and siltstone. The unit is conglomeraic at the top and contains abundant granule to cobble-size clasts of andesite, quartzite, chert, granite, and sandstone. The largest clasts are concentrated in the Kaycee-Mayworth area in Johnson County and progressively decrease in size southward toward Arminto in Natrona Country, Paloeocurrent directions obtained from the cross-bedded unit indicate a general south-southeast trend. The Second Wall Creek sand is thickest in the Kaycee-Mayworth area and thins southward towards Arminto. The presence of a unique petrologic suite places a constraint on provenance and sediment-dispersal patterns in a tectonically active rapidly evolving foreland basin. Of particular interest is the peculiar lensoid distribution of andesite clasts, which follows a general northwest-southeast trend for more than 150 mi from Cody to the Kaycee-Mayworth area, Wyoming. Noticeable absence of andesite clasts on either side of this observed trend suggests a strong dependence of the ultimate sediment-dispersal system on several physical constraints, including local morphotectonic setting, paleohydraulics, and provenance. A large high-energy distributary complex is invoked for the deposition of this linear conglomeratic facies. This dispersal system extended east-southeastward from the orogenic fold-and-thrust-belt into the adjoining foreland basin.
- OSTI ID:
- 6084296
- Report Number(s):
- CONF-880301-
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
Similar Records
Regional implications of an extensive linear sediment-dispersal system along western margin of Cretaceous interior seaway: Second Wall Creek sand, Powder River basin, Wyoming
Tectonic significance of lithicwacke-polymictic conglomerate petrofacies association within Upper Cretaceous torchlight sandstone, Big Horn basin, Wyoming
Provenance and sediment-dispersal system in tectonically active rapidly evolving foreland basin, Western Interior
Conference
·
Sun Jan 31 23:00:00 EST 1988
· AAPG Bull.; (United States)
·
OSTI ID:6011483
Tectonic significance of lithicwacke-polymictic conglomerate petrofacies association within Upper Cretaceous torchlight sandstone, Big Horn basin, Wyoming
Conference
·
Fri May 01 00:00:00 EDT 1987
· AAPG (Am. Assoc. Pet. Geol.) Bull.; (United States)
·
OSTI ID:6220284
Provenance and sediment-dispersal system in tectonically active rapidly evolving foreland basin, Western Interior
Conference
·
Tue Feb 28 23:00:00 EST 1989
· AAPG Bull.; (United States)
·
OSTI ID:5880752
Related Subjects
02 PETROLEUM
020200* -- Petroleum-- Reserves
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03 NATURAL GAS
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CRETACEOUS PERIOD
EXPLORATION
FEDERAL REGION VIII
GEOLOGIC AGES
GEOLOGIC DEPOSITS
GEOLOGIC HISTORY
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NORTH AMERICA
PALEONTOLOGY
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USA
WYOMING
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03 NATURAL GAS
030200 -- Natural Gas-- Reserves
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& Exploration
CRETACEOUS PERIOD
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GEOLOGY
MESOZOIC ERA
MINERAL RESOURCES
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NORTH AMERICA
PALEONTOLOGY
PETROGRAPHY
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PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
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RESERVOIR ROCK
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SEDIMENTARY ROCKS
SEDIMENTATION
SEDIMENTS
TECTONICS
USA
WYOMING