Polytopic Vector Analysis of Foraminiferal Faunas from the Offshore Yakataga Formation (Late Cenozoic-Gulf Of Alaska): A Potential Tool for Sequence Biostratigraphers
Sarah D. Zellers
Paleontologic samples often consist of fossil assemblages that are mixtures
of fauna from different paleoenvironments and ages. These mixtures are usually
the result of geologic processes (e.g. downslope transport of living or fossil
material), but may also be due to problems in data collection (e.g. downhole
contamination). These mixed assemblages can present problems when trying to use
microfossil distribution patterns for identifying
sequence boundaries or
condensed
sections
(sequence biostratigraphy).
Polytopic Vector Analysis (PVA) is a multivariate quantitative ordination method that was designed to "unmix" geological samples, and has been used successfully in unmixing foraminiferal assemblages. Output from PVA includes end member compositions which reflect the importance of each species in defining each end member and deneg proportions which indicate the proportion of each end member in the sample. This output provides information on intrasample and intersample variability (deneg proportions) and can be used to identify components within the mixed assemblages which can lead to insight into the origin of mixing processes. Results of PVA data on benthic foraminiferal data from four petroleum wells in the offshore Yakataga Fm. in the northeastern Gulf of Alaska are presented to ill strate the use of PVA in a sequence biostratigraphic framework.
The Neogene through Quaternary Yakataga Fm. is a 7 km thick succession of
interbedded glacial marine and normal marine clastics that is an excellent
record of the interplay between tectonics, sedimentation, eustasy, and
glaciation along an active continental margin. Eight tectonically controlled
seismic
stratigraphic
sequences
were recognized in the offshore Yakataga Fm.
using foraminiferal sequence biostratigraphy and
seismic
stratigraphy. PVA was
used to further investigate the nature of foraminiferal assemblages within the
offshore wells in order to improve sequence biostratigraphic interpretations and
to identify the processes yielding mixed assemblages along this margin.
The following seven end members, interpreted as biofacies, were identified in
the Yakataga data set using PVA: EM1--Elphidium excavatum clavatum
(inner neritic); EM2--Epistominella pacifica (upper bathyal);
EM3--sharp margined Cassidulina; EM4--Cassidulina californica
(outer neritic); EM5--round margined Cassidulina; EM6--Uvigerina
peregrina (upper bathyal); and EM7--Haplophragmoides spp. (outer
neritic). Most samples contain a mixture of two or more of these different
biofacies. Geologic mixing on the Yakataga continental margin is probably due to
the following: 1) downslope transport of living or fossils specimens due to
slumping; 2) transport of faunas by icebergs or sea ice; 3) constriction of
water masses due to sea l vel changes; 3) or juxtaposition of water masses due
to position of glacial ice. Identification of these processes has yielded a
better understanding of the development of stratigraphic sequences
along this
margin.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91020©1995 AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, May 5-8, 1995