Rocky Mountain Section - 57th Annual Meeting (May 23–25, 2005)

Paper No. 7
Presentation Time: 2:45 PM

DEPOSITIONAL SYSTEM OF THE UPPER JURASSIC BRUSHY BASIN MEMBER OF THE MORRISON FORMATION, FOUR CORNERS REGION, USA


LUCAS, Spencer G., New Mexico Museum of Nat History & Sci, 1801 Mountain Road NW, Albuquerque, NM 87104-1375 and TANNER, Lawrence H., Geography and Geosciences, Bloomsburg Univ, Bloomsburg, PA 17815, slucas@nmmnh.state.nm.us

The idea that Upper Jurassic Brushy Basin Member of the Morrison Formation in the Four Corners region was deposited in a large, alkaline, saline lake (Lake T'oo'dichi') is well entrenched in the literature. Lake T'oo'dichi'has been envisioned as a closed lake basin 500 km N-S and 300 km E-W that was the locus of formation of authigenic zeolites (analcime, clinoptilolite and albite) that supposedly form a concentric zonation that corresponds to lake paleogeography. We question the existence of Lake T'oo'dichi' because: (1) sandstone bodies representing meanderbelt channels are found in the Brushy Basin across much of the Four Corners region; many have scoured bases, conglomeratic lags, lateral accretion forests and bioturbated tops indicative of a meandering fluvial system, not a lake; (2) unequivocal profundal lacustrine facies are absent on outcrop; (3) no data have been presented to document a concentric zonation of zeolites that would define a lake basin; (4) syndepositional formation of albite and analcime in the Brushy Basin Member is unlikely because it would require water temperatures (85-100oC) and extreme thermal stratification of the water column for which there is no evidence;(5) Brushy Basin Member lithofacies extend well beyond the Four Corners--virtually all of the Morrison Formation off of the Colorado Plateau is Brushy Basin Member--which would extend Lake T'oo'dichi' to Montana and Oklahoma; the lithofacies that supposedly characterize Lake T'oo'dichi' extend well beyond its hypothesized limits; and (6) taphonomic and paleoecological studies of Brushy Basin Member fossil plants and vertebrate fossils do not support the presence of a large lake. Instead of deposition in Lake T'oo'dichi', all data indicate Brushy Basin Member deposition took place in a vast, low-gradient floodbasin characterized by a mosaic of meandering channels, small lakes or playas and stable, pedogenically-modified interfluves. Carbonate sediments were deposited during base-level highstands in ponds and marshes of limited aerial extent and subsequently subjected to pedogenic modification. Syndepositional authigenesis of ash-fall tuffs formed low-temperature zeolites, but post-depositional diagenesis at elevated temperatures is likely related to hydrothermal activity caused by Tertiary volcanism.