Model
for Carbonate Deposition in an Epicontinental Bay
Cindy Carney, Richard Smosna
By mapping the distribution of correlative sediments across the north-central
region of the Appalachian basin, a paleogeographic model
has been generated for
part of the Mississippian period. During the Chesterian, the upper Greenbrier
Limestone was deposited in an embayment that extended northward into parts of
West Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Maryland. The bay, only a few hundred
kilometers wide, was surrounded by lowlands to the west and north, and deltaic
sediments shed from nearby highlands diluted the easternmost facies. In the bay,
several different shallow-water carbonate environments are distinguished. Muddy
skeletal sand was deposited in the central part, which was characterized by
normal marine circulation and salinity. This open-bay facies supported a mo
erately diverse fauna of forams, brachiopods, and mollusks. From the central
facies to the bay margins, water depth decreased, circulation became more
restricted, and salinity was slightly higher. A restricted-bay facies developed
closer to shore, with sediment consisting of pelletal mud and scattered skeletal
grains. Diversity was lower, and the fauna was composed primarily of forams and
ostracodes. A tidal mud flat surrounded the embayment on all three sides where
partly to totally dolomitized mud containing cryptalgal structures formed.
Oolite shoals, present on the eastern side of the bay near its mouth, mark areas
where tidal currents were concentrated. Eventually, the epicontinental sea
flooded the small enclosed bay, replacing the shallow-water facies with an
open-marine facies. T e new environment supported a highly diverse fauna
including crinoids, brachiopods, mollusks, forams, and ostracods.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91043©1986 AAPG Annual Convention, Atlanta, Georgia, June 15-18, 1986.