Paleosols in the Nanushuk Formation, Brooks Range Foothills, Alaska: Preliminary Observations and Sequence Stratigraphic Implications
By
P.J. McCarthy (University of Alaska, Fairbanks) and D.L. LePain (Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys)
Paleosols are increasingly viewed as an important,
component in nonmarine sequence stratigraphic analyses, where they mark
interfluve sequence boundaries and provide at least qualitative information on
relative rates of accommodation change within intervening alluvial strata.
However, the application of detailed paleopedological analyses to nonmarine
sequence stratigraphic studies is still relatively rare. This study focuses on
alluvial and coastal plain deposits of the Cretaceous Nanushuk Formation exposed
along the Kanayut River and at Arc Mountain, south of the National Petroleum
Reserve, Alaska (NPRA). During the 2001 field season, these sites were logged
and sampled for subsequent micromorphological, geochemical and mineralogical
analyses. Preliminary observations indicate that pedogenic modification of
alluvial deposits is common, however, rapid deposition of sediment and generally
wet conditions resulted in a preponderance of weakly-developed and
poorly-drained paleosols similar to modern entisols, inceptisols, gleysols and
histosols. Sandstone and mudstone paleosols may contain a few large root traces,
sometimes expressed as vertical to sub-horizontal coalified structures or as
surface cradle knolls, but they maintain evidence of primary stratification
and/or cumulic development. Coalified and carbonaceous root traces, organic
fragments, blocky structures and abundant siderite nodules provide further
evidence of waterlogged conditions. By combining field observations, paleosol
micromorphology, geochemistry and mineralogy with regional stratigraphic
information it is possible to pin-point the exact position of sequence
boundaries in nonmarine rocks. Further work is planned in an attempt to
understand the regional distribution of paleosols in the Nanushuk Formation in
order to better characterize significant nonmarine depositional hiatuses
(sequence boundaries) and Cretaceous high-latitude paleoenvironmental
conditions.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90008©2002 AAPG Pacific Section/SPE Western Region Joint Conference of Geoscientists and Petroleum Engineers, Anchorage, Alaska, May 18–23, 2002.