Northeastern Section - 43rd Annual Meeting (27-29 March 2008)

Paper No. 6
Presentation Time: 8:00 AM-12:00 PM

SEDIMENTOLOGY OF THE LOWER SPRINGHILL MINES FORMATION, CUMBERLAND BASIN, NOVA SCOTIA


SALG, Jamie, Geology, State University of New York, College at Potsdam, 44 Pierrepont Avenue, Potsdam, NY 13676 and RYGEL, Michael C., Department of Geology, State University of New York, College at Potsdam, 44 Pierrepont Ave, Potsdam, NY 13676, salg18@potsdam.edu

The Pennsylvanian (Langsettian-Duckmantian) Springhill Mines Formation is a 660 m thick, coal-bearing unit deposited in the Cumberland Basin of mainland Nova Scotia. Although this formation represents the uppermost part of the world-famous Joggins “section,” this study is the first detailed sedimentological examination of the lower 180 m of this unit.

The basal 10 m consists of interbedded dark gray shale and fine-grained, wave-rippled, sheet sandstones. This interval records flooding of the basin and deposition in a standing body of water deep enough to inhibit plant growth. The overlying 170 m consists of seven alternations between poorly-drained and well-drained floodplain facies. Poorly-drained floodplain deposits (8-22 m thick) include green and gray mudstones, thin coal beds, channel bodies, and sheet sandstones with entombed lycopsids and calamites. These facies were deposited in forested, clastic and peat-forming wetlands. Well-drained floodplain deposits (14-25 m thick) consist of red mudstones and sheet sandstones. Roots and scattered green mottles are present throughout well-drained intervals. Well-drained facies are interpreted to represent deposition on a seasonally-oxidizing floodplain.

The facies and stratigraphic architecture of the lower Springhill Mines Formation is remarkably similar to that of the underlying Joggins Formation. This similarity suggests that alternations between poorly-drained and well-drained facies record sea-level fluctuations in a tectonically active basin.