2004 Denver Annual Meeting (November 7–10, 2004)

Paper No. 16
Presentation Time: 8:00 AM-12:00 PM

DETAILED GEOLOGIC MAPPING: GEOLOGICAL ACUMEN FOR SEVIER-BLOUNTIAN BASIN DYNAMICS: BAYS MOUNTIAN SYNCLINORIUM, NORTHEASTERN TENNESSEE


BULTMAN, John G.1, WHITMER, Neil E.1, LEMISZKI, Peter2 and HATCHER, Robert D. Jr.1, (1)Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Univ of Tennessee, 306 Geological Sciences Building, Knoxville, TN 37996-1410, (2)Tennessee Division of Geology, 2700 Middlebrook Pike, Suite 230, Knoxville, TN 37921-5602, jbultman@utk.edu

In the Appalachian orogenic belt, many aspects of 4-D basin evolution, structural and stratigraphic relationships, and foreland-fold thrust belt (FFTB) kinematics have yet to be determined. Existing palinspastic reconstructions of the Alleghanian FFTB require that the Llanvirn-Llandeilo Sevier-Blountian basin was ~300 km inboard from the rifted Laurentian margin. Results of our geologic mapping combined with new detrital zircon and existing sedimentological data suggest the Sevier-Blountian basin is a back-bulge basin. Furthermore, easterly-derived conglomerate in the lower third of the section on the eastern flank of the basin is composed predominantly of Cambrian-Ordovician platform carbonates with fewer 1.1 Ga basement and Cambrian rifted-margin platform clasts. The Bays Mountain synclinorium and surrounding area in the Tennessee Valley and Ridge provides critical facies data to address Sevier-Blountian basin dynamics. This area preserves the Middle Ordovician post-Knox unconformity, the Sevier-Blountian basin depositional sequence, overlying Bays Formation quartz arenite-redbed sequence, and the base of the overlying Caradocian Martinsburg clastic wedge. Detailed geologic mapping has identified key marker units used to divide the Sevier Shale into three members: a lower thin-bedded, dark gray-black graptolite-bearing shale overlain by dark gray-black micritic limestone, a middle silty-sandy limestone interbedded with light-gray silty shale overlain by calcareous sandstone, and an upper thick-bedded light gray shale grading upward into massive fossil-bearing sandy limestone. Faulting and folding within the Sevier Shale is responsible for previous thickness estimates as large as 10,000 ft (3,048 m). Instead we propose a maximum thickness of 5,000 ft (1,524 m) near the edge of the basin and a maximum basin thickness estimate of 7,500 ft (2286 m). Compilation and reanalysis of previous work, as well as new detailed geologic mapping better delineate 4-D basin evolution and FFTB kinematics providing insight for future studies.