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Origin of a classic cratonic sheet sandstone; stratigraphy across the Sauk II-Sauk III boundary in the Upper Mississippi Valley

Anthony C. Runkel, Robert M. McKay and Allison R. Palmer
Origin of a classic cratonic sheet sandstone; stratigraphy across the Sauk II-Sauk III boundary in the Upper Mississippi Valley
Geological Society of America Bulletin (February 1998) 110 (2): 188-210

Abstract

The origin of cratonic sheet sandstones of Proterozoic and early Paleozoic age has been a long-standing problem for sedimentologists. Lower Paleozoic strata in the Upper Mississippi Valley are best known for several such sandstone bodies, the regional depositional histories of which are poorly understood. We have combined outcrop and subsurface data from six states to place the Upper Cambrian Wonewoc (Ironton and Galesville) Sandstone in a well-constrained stratigraphic framework across thousands of square kilometers. This framework makes it possible for the first time to construct a regional-scale depositional model that explains the origin of this and other cratonic sheet sandstones. The Wonewoc Sandstone, although mapped as a single contiguous sheet, is a stratigraphically complex unit that was deposited during three distinct conditions of relative sea level that span parts of four trilobite zones. During a relative highstand of sea level in Crepicephalus Zone time, quartzose sandstone lithofacies aggraded more or less vertically in nearshore-marine and terrestrial environments across much of the present-day outcrop belt around the Wisconsin arch. At the same time, finer grained, feldspathic sandstone, siltstone, and shale aggraded in deeper water immediately seaward of the quartzose sand, and shale and carbonate sediment accumulated in the most distal areas. During Aphelaspis and Dunderbergia Zones time a relative fall in sea level led to the dispersal of quartzose sand into a basinward-tapering, sheet-like body across much of the Upper Mississippi Valley. During early Elvinia Zone time a major transgression led to deposition of a second sheet sandstone that is generally similar to the underlying regressive sheet. The results of this investigation also demonstrate how subtle sequence-bounding unconformities may be recognized in mature, cratonic siliciclastics. We place the Sauk II-Sauk III subsequence boundary at the base of the coarsest bed in the Wonewoc Sandstone, a lag developed through erosion that occurred during the regional regressive-transgressive event that spanned Aphelaspis to early Elvinia Zones time. Such sequence-bounding unconformities are difficult to recognize where they are contained within coarse siliciclastics of the Upper Mississippi Valley, because they separate strata that are texturally and mineralogically similar, and because erosion occurred on a loose, sandy substrate along a low, uniform gradient, and in a nonvegetated terrestrial environment. Furthermore, the ultramature mineral composition of the exposed substrate is resistant to the development of a recognizable weathering profile. The well-known sheet geometry of the Wonewoc and other units of lower Paleozoic sandstone of this area is not dependent on atypical terrestrial depositional conditions conducive to the widespread distribution of sand, as commonly believed. Sand was spread into a sheet dominantly within the marine realm in a manner similar to that inferred for many better-known sandstone bodies deposited in the North American Cretaceous Western Interior seaway and Tertiary Gulf of Mexico. The laterally extensive, thin character of the Upper Mississippi Valley sandstone bodies compared to these other sandstone bodies simply reflects deposition of a continuously abundant supply of sand on a relatively stable, nearly flat basin of slow, uniform subsidence during changes in sea level. The dearth of shale in this and other cratonic sandstones can be indirectly attributed to the same controls, which led to an uncommonly low preservation potential for fairweather deposits on the shoreface.


ISSN: 0016-7606
EISSN: 1943-2674
Coden: BUGMAF
Serial Title: Geological Society of America Bulletin
Serial Volume: 110
Serial Issue: 2
Title: Origin of a classic cratonic sheet sandstone; stratigraphy across the Sauk II-Sauk III boundary in the Upper Mississippi Valley
Affiliation: Minnesota Geological Survey, St. Paul, MN, United States
Pages: 188-210
Published: 199802
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
References: 123
Accession Number: 1998-022938
Categories: StratigraphySedimentary petrology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Annotation: With GSA Data Repository Item 9801
Illustration Description: illus. incl. sects., 2 tables, sketch maps
N29°00'00" - N56°00'00", W115°00'00" - W97°00'00"
N37°00'00" - N42°30'00", W91°30'00" - W87°30'00"
N40°25'00" - N43°30'00", W96°34'60" - W90°10'00"
N43°30'00" - N49°00'00", W97°10'00" - W89°45'00"
N36°00'00" - N40°34'60", W95°45'00" - W89°04'60"
N40°00'00" - N43°00'00", W104°04'60" - W95°19'60"
N42°30'00" - N47°00'00", W92°49'60" - W86°45'00"
Secondary Affiliation: Iowa Department of Natural Resources, Iowa City, IA, USA, United StatesInstitute for Cambrian Studies, Boulder, CO, USA, United States
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2019, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
Update Code: 199809
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