A LATE CRETACEOUS, ALLUVIAL PALEOENVIRONMENT: THE PRINCE CREEK FORMATION, NORTH SLOPE OF THE BROOKS RANGE, ALASKA
Drab-colored mudstones and siltstones are abundant along with thin (0.1 to 0.5 m) sheet sandstones and coaly shale. Root traces, siderite nodules, Fe-oxide mottling, and blocky structure are common. Non-channelized, fine-grained facies are interpreted as lakes, lake margins, peat-bogs, levees, crevasse splays, and paleosols. Fe-oxide mottling, drab colors, and siderite within stacked, aggregated mudstones suggest that paleosols are cumulative and poorly drained. Dinosaur bones are localized within some fine-grained successions and dinoturbation is rare but present. Bentonites, and tuffs occur throughout and increase in thickness and frequency up-section.
Common, 1 to 3 m thick, very fine-to fine-grained trough cross-laminated/ripple-laminated sandbodies are predominantly single-story. Most contain carbonized root traces, and siderite concretions. These sandbodies occur as thin, ribbon-like channels surrounded by overbank fines, or as extensive sheet sands with prominent lateral accretion surfaces. Ribbon sandbodies are interpreted as non-migrating, low-energy anastomosed channel fills while sheet sandstones are interpreted as low-energy meandering streams.
Rare, multi-story, medium-to coarse-grained sheet sandstones up to 7 m thick are limited in extent. Coarser-grained sandbodies are dominated by lateral accretion and often contain mud rip-up clasts, trough cross-laminations, silicified or carbonized logs, and pebble lags. Large dinosaur bones are found rarely within channel lag deposits. These localized, medium-to coarse-grained sandbodies record the highest energy flows within the Prince Creek Formation and probably represent meandering trunk channels.
Finer-grained facies dominate within the Prince Creek Formation and record low energy stream/flood-plain deposits. Coarser-grained sandbodies suggest local, higher energy environments within a low-lying, wet alluvial plain.