TRANSITIONAL UPPER DEVONIAN STRATIGRAPHY IN IDAHO—A RELATIVE SEA-LEVEL GEOHISTORY SUGGESTS COMPLEX DISCONFORMITIES ON A LOW LATITUDE WESTERN EURAMERICAN MARGIN
Famennian rocks are separated from lower Devonian rocks by widely accommodated latest Frasnian (rhenana-linguiformis zones?) transgressive sequences. These include Nisku equivalent Thamnopora and Amphipora biostromes. Lithofacies above these rocks include sandy brecciated carbonates (east) and shoaling peloidal-intraclastic rocks (west). Proximal to distal shelf lithofacies are cyclic at meter to 10m scales, but larger (3rd-order?) 50-100m sequences are observed in only pre-Famennian rocks. Quartzose sands were throughout the Devonian derived from the craton.
The lower stratigraphic succession was deposited on a relatively quiet margin during 1st-order Kaskaskia sea level rise. The upper stratigraphic succession was deposited during global(?) 2nd-order regression and climatic-eustatic effects. Gross stratigraphic geometry suggests an intra-shelfal basin formed in the early Famennian, but by middle Famennian time, a well dated, more homogenous blanket of the Three Forks Formation was draped across the entire shelf. Prior to extreme Mississippian drowning, upper Devonian strata in Idaho suggest incipient, regional extensional foreland break-up of the margin with discontinuous Jefferson facies followed by a radical change in depositional environments, cyclicity and hiatus during Three Forks time.