The Cumberland Basin is one of several sedimentary basins composing the late Paleozoic Maritimes Basin complex of eastern Canada. Pennsylvanian salt tectonics in the Cumberland Basin caused two salt mini-basins to evolve on either side of the Minudie Anticline, a salt wall. South of the wall (Athol Syncline), along the Joggins World Heritage shoreline, an ∼3000 m succession of strata (Little River, Joggins, Springhill Mines, and Ragged Reef formations) accumulated conformably on the Boss Point Formation. North of the wall (Black Point sub-basin), the biostratigraphically equivalent, but mostly unstudied, ∼600 m thick succession of Grande Anse Formation lies in angular unconformity on folded and faulted Boss Point and basal Little River formations. Grande Anse Formation sedimentology indicates four lithofacies associations: floodplain (LA1), braided channel (LA2), sheet flood (LA3), and debris flow deposits (LA4). One possible model has the Black Point sub-basin with its own hydrological system, completely separated from the Athol Syncline. A low subsidence rate combined with the low sedimentation rate produced the ∼600 m thick sand- and mud-prone succession that was contemporaneous with the ∼3 km succession to the south. The second model proposes that north of the salt wall was exposed to erosion during accumulation of Joggins and Springhill Mines formation strata to the south. Subsequently, the sediment of the lithologically similar Ragged Reef and Grande Anse formations either (i) onlapped to the north, unconformably on the folded Boss Point; or (ii) unconformably–disconformably on the underlying strata after a period of time indistinguishable in the biostratigraphic record.
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Research Article|
August 06, 2020
Stratigraphy and sedimentology of the Pennsylvanian Grande Anse Formation, Cumberland Basin, eastern Canada: its relationship to salt tectonics and coeval strata of the Joggins World Heritage Site Available to Purchase
Fadel Bahr;
Department of Earth Sciences, University of New Brunswick, 2 Bailey Drive, Fredericton, NB E3B 5A3, Canada.
Corresponding author: Fadel Bahr (email: [email protected]).
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Dave Keighley
Dave Keighley
Department of Earth Sciences, University of New Brunswick, 2 Bailey Drive, Fredericton, NB E3B 5A3, Canada.
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Department of Earth Sciences, University of New Brunswick, 2 Bailey Drive, Fredericton, NB E3B 5A3, Canada.
Dave Keighley
Department of Earth Sciences, University of New Brunswick, 2 Bailey Drive, Fredericton, NB E3B 5A3, Canada.
Corresponding author: Fadel Bahr (email: [email protected]).
Publisher: Canadian Science Publishing
Received:
20 Apr 2020
Accepted:
28 Jul 2020
First Online:
10 Mar 2021
Online ISSN: 1480-3313
Print ISSN: 0008-4077
Published by NRC Research Press
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2021) 58 (3): 209–224.
Article history
Received:
20 Apr 2020
Accepted:
28 Jul 2020
First Online:
10 Mar 2021
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CitationFadel Bahr, Dave Keighley; Stratigraphy and sedimentology of the Pennsylvanian Grande Anse Formation, Cumberland Basin, eastern Canada: its relationship to salt tectonics and coeval strata of the Joggins World Heritage Site. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 2020;; 58 (3): 209–224. doi: https://doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2020-0075
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Index Terms/Descriptors
- braided streams
- Canada
- Carboniferous
- Cumberland Basin
- Cumberland County Nova Scotia
- Eastern Canada
- floodplains
- fluvial features
- grain size
- Joggins Formation
- Joggins Fossil Cliffs
- lithostratigraphy
- Maritime Provinces
- Nova Scotia
- paleofloods
- Paleozoic
- Pennsylvanian
- salt tectonics
- stratigraphic units
- streams
- tectonics
- unconformities
- World Heritage sites
- Grande Anse Formation
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