| SILICICLASTIC-CARBONATE CYCLES OF THE NEOPROTEROZOIC BLACKROCK CANYON LIMESTONE, SOUTHEASTERN IDAHO | ||
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LINK, Paul Karl1, CORSETTI, Frank Aldemaro2, and LORENTZ, Nathaniel J.2, (1) Geology, Idaho State Univ, Pocatello, ID 83209, linkpaul@isu.edu, (2) Department of Earth Sciences, Univ of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089 The Neoproterozoic Blackrock Canyon Limestone, southeastern Idaho, is positioned above the siliciclastic-dominated, fining-upward Pocatello Formation and below the siliciclastic-dominated, coarsening-upward Brigham Group. In the type area, the Blackrock Canyon “Limestone” is 174 m thick. Siltstones and sandstones dominate the formation while cyclic carbonates comprise only ~25 percent. About 20 km south along strike, on the south slope of Scout Mountain, the formation contains only a few meters of thin dark limestone. The Blackrock Canyon type exposures contain siliciclastics and carbonates, arranged in five cycles; each cycle is composed of a siliciclastic lower half and a carbonate upper half (these could be considered “grand cycles” but most likely represent shallowing upward parasequences in a larger sequence stratigraphic framework). The siltstones of the siliciclastic half cycles are identical to those in the overlying Papoose Creek Formation. They contain unusual shrinkage cracks in thinly interbedded, parallel-laminated, siltstone and fine-grained sandstone. The carbonate units are predominantly laminated mudstones to packstones in the lower three cycles and cross-bedded oolitic grainstones in the upper two cycles. The lower carbonate units also contain poorly defined stromatolitic and/or thrombolitic bioherms on the order of a few meters in width and height. Dolomitized, irregular exposure surfaces are present in the uppermost carbonate units. Each carbonate half-cycle represents shallower deposition than in the preceding cycle. Therefore, the carbonate units record a forestepping pattern and are interpreted to represent the initiation of highstand deposition. The localization of these thick parasequences suggests a tectonically controlled south-facing hinge, where the Proterozoic basin shallowed to the north on the flanks of the Bannock Volcanic eruptive center. | ||
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Rocky Mountain - 54th Annual Meeting (May 7–9, 2002)
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| Session No. 11 P3: Proterozoic Paleogeography and Paleoclimate Sharwan Smith Center: Theater 8:00 AM-12:00 PM, Wednesday, May 8, 2002 | ||
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