FACIES STACKING PATTERNS IN STORM-INFLUENCED DELTA FRONT AND SHOREFACE SUCCESSIONS, NANUSHUK FORMATION, CENTRAL NORTH SLOPE, ALASKA
LEPAIN, David L., Department of Environmental Science, Wisconsin Geol and Nat History Survey, 3817 Mineral Point Road, Madison, WI 53705, [email protected], MCCARTHY, Paul J., Dept. of Geology and Geophysics, and Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, P.O. Box 755780, Fairbanks, AK 99775-5780, and KIRKHAM, Russell, Alaska Division of Mines, Land & Water, 550 W. 7th Ave, Anchorage, AK 99501
Fluvial-deltaic strata of the Albian-Cenomanian Nanushuk Formation form the
top of a thick wedge of basinal to alluvial depositional systems extending from
the Chukchi Sea eastward to the central North Slope. These systems record the
west-to-east filling of a large foreland basin formed in response to
north-vergent thrust loading of continental crust starting in Late Jurassic
time. The marine part of the Nanushuk along the south side of its outcrop belt
includes thick parasequences
that consist, in ascending order, of burrowed
mudstone and bioturbated HCS sandstone, recording deposition in storm
wave-influenced lower shoreface and delta-front settings.
Parasequences
are
characterized by subtle facies differentiation and sequence boundaries are
cryptic. This facies motif continues upward to the base of the marine-nonmarine
transition, where
parasequences
are capped by a variety of nearshore and
marginal-marine facies and display significant facies differentiation, recording
deposition in upper shoreface/delta-front to backshore settings. In the northern
part of the outcrop belt, the marine Nanushuk includes thinner
parasequences
that consist, in ascending order, of burrowed mudstone, interbedded mudstone and
HCS sandstone, bioturbated HCS sandstone, and amalgamated HCS and SCS sandstone,
recording deposition in storm-influenced offshore transition through
shoreface/delta-front settings.
Parasequences
are characterized by pronounced
facies differentiation. Abrupt facies dislocations from offshore to upper
shoreface facies and offshore transition to fluvial channel sandstone facies are
associated with prominent sequence boundaries, and are characteristic of the
uppermost Nanushuk in this part of the outcrop belt. These relations suggest the
possibility of significant shelf bypassing to supply deepwater systems in latest
Albian and Cenomanian time.