Upper Ordovician (Sandbian-Katian) carbonate outliers in the northern Ottawa-Bonnechere Graben (central Canada); records of transgressions and sedimentation patterns in the Laurentian Platform interior
Upper Ordovician (Sandbian-Katian) carbonate outliers in the northern Ottawa-Bonnechere Graben (central Canada); records of transgressions and sedimentation patterns in the Laurentian Platform interior
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences = Revue Canadienne des Sciences de la Terre (January 2021) 58 (1): 1-20
- alkaline earth metals
- assemblages
- biostratigraphy
- Brent Crater
- C-13/C-12
- Canada
- Canadian Shield
- carbon
- carbonate platforms
- chemostratigraphy
- Chordata
- Conodonta
- correlation
- Eastern Canada
- isotope ratios
- isotopes
- Katian
- lithofacies
- lithostratigraphy
- marine environment
- metals
- microfossils
- Nipissing District Ontario
- North America
- O-18/O-16
- Ontario
- Ordovician
- oxygen
- paleo-oceanography
- paleoenvironment
- Paleozoic
- Renfrew County Ontario
- Sandbian
- sea-level changes
- Sr-87/Sr-86
- stable isotopes
- strontium
- transgression
- Upper Ordovician
- Vertebrata
- Ottawa-Bonnechere Graben
- Cedar Lake
- Manitou Islands
- Laurentian Platform
- Deux Rivieres Ontario
- Owen Quarry
Small Ordovician sedimentary outliers, including Brent Crater, within the northern Ottawa-Bonnechere graben are remnants of a once expansive Upper Ordovician sedimentary cover extending across the southern Canadian Shield. Facies successions along with updated macrofossil and conodont biostratigraphy, and isotope (C, O, Sr) chemostratigraphy provide additional insights into the terrestrial-to-marine transformation, carbonate-platform development, and oceanographic communication across the southern Laurentian platform. Four of the outliers document Sandbian shoreline-to-nearshore deposition: near Deux Rivieres, Manitou Islands, the upper part of the Brent Crater sedimentary fill, and at nearby Cedar Lake. Marine transgression initially reworked local fine-grained to boulder-rich regolith within high-energy shoreface siliciclastic environments that gave way to low- to high-energy inner carbonate-ramp setting. Continued transgression resulted in more offshore rhythmic and diverse lithofacies successions defining mixed heterozoan, photozoan, and microbial productivity and marine isotope (C, Sr) signatures, but delta (super 13) C excursions suggest periods of greater mixing of terrestrial and marine carbon reservoirs. Lower Katian strata are preserved near Lake Nipissing and characterize deepening from high-energy ooid-heterozoan skeletal shoals to deeper water mid-ramp siliciclastics and skeletal carbonates, host to a Cruziana ichnofacies. An upsection decline in delta (super 13) C values through this succession may identify deposition during the post-peak decline of the global Guttenberg delta (super 13) C excursion. This lithic succession fits well with contemporary expansion of heterozoan skeletal lithofacies across the Laurentian platform, yet the presence of ooids identifies prevailing warm waters within the platform interior during early stages of transgression.