SEDIMENTOLOGICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF THE SEGO SANDSTONE OF WESTERN COLORADO AND DETAILS ON FLOOD TIDAL DELTA DEPOSITS
Multiple depositional environments have been suggested for the Sego, but most agree that it is tidally influenced to tidally dominated. Three targeted tidal bodies spanning our study area, west, east, and south, are hypothesized to be potential flood tidal delta deposits. To test this hypothesis, we investigate bedform architecture, paleocurrent direction, and grain size within the three sand bodies. If these deposits represent a flood tidal delta environment we expect them to exhibit bidirectional paleocurrents, to vary in grain size due to overwash from storm deposits breeching the barrier island, and some kind of lobe shape. Our new field data show that flood tidal delta facies are 3-6m thick and range from ~90-500m long. Distinguishing features include: white, cross-bedded, upper-fine grained sand with subsidiary rippled beds and tidal bundles. Bioturbation is minimal to moderate and mud drapes and erosion surfaces are always present, usually in between discreet unidirectional cross-bedded intervals. We speculate that the erosional surfaces represent the opposite tidal direction, accounting for the missing bidirectional cross-beds.
Preliminary sandstone petrography data show that most of the composition is quartzitic, which is consistent with a Sevier source. In addition to correlating the stratigraphic architecture of the Sego Sandstone, we have applied zircon U-Pb geochronology to better determine the provenance and depositional age of the Sego Sandstone. Our data document a source characterized by 76.6-360 Ma, consistent with a source located in the Sevier hinterland and a maximum depositional age for the investigated samples of 76 ± Ma.