The Terrane Puzzle: New Perspectives on Paleontology and Stratigraphy from the North American Cordillera
Stratigraphy of the Triassic Martin Bridge Formation, Wallowa terrane: Stratigraphy and depositional setting
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Published:July 01, 2008
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CiteCitation
George D. Stanley, Jr., Christopher A. McRoberts, Michael T. Whalen, 2008. "Stratigraphy of the Triassic Martin Bridge Formation, Wallowa terrane: Stratigraphy and depositional setting", The Terrane Puzzle: New Perspectives on Paleontology and Stratigraphy from the North American Cordillera, Robert B. Blodgett, George D. Stanley, Jr.
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The Upper Triassic (Carnian–Norian) Martin Bridge Formation of northeastern Oregon, southeastern Washington, and western Idaho is characterized by rapidly shifting depositional processes within a tropical volcanic island arc setting. Martin Bridge sequences in the Hells Canyon and northern Wallowa Mountains document shallow-water peritidal evaporitic sediments that are succeeded by deeper and predominantly subtidal deposits. This indicates drowning of the carbonate platform and a transition to deeper-water turbiditic sedimentation before a late Triassic transition into the overlying mid-Norian to Jurassic Hurwal Formation. At the type locality in the southern Wallowa Mountains, dysaerobic shales, carbonate debris sheets, and turbiditic sediments indicate distal slope and basinal environments while other facies at other sites in the Wallowa Mountains and Hells Canyon areas indicate reef and shallow-water platform settings.
In this paper we formally recognize the name Martin Bridge Formation and reinstate the type locality in the southern Wallowa Mountains as the principal unit strato-type. An additional reference section is given at Hurricane Creek in the northern Wallowa Mountains. The Martin Bridge is formally divided into four members: the Eagle Creek and Summit Point Members are introduced and formally proposed herein and the BC Creek and Scotch Creek Members also are elevated to formal status.
A partial reconstruction of the Wallowa terrane during deposition of the Martin Bridge Formation suggests a north-south (or northeast-southwest) trending platform margin facing a forearc basin situated to the east (or southeast). The lithofacies and paleontological characteristics of the Martin Bridge can be put into the framework of a depositional and a tectonic model to help better explain many of the stratigraphic and paleontologic problems previously encountered. We believe that the Wallowa terrane provides one of the best and most complete examples yet known for shallow-water carbonate depositional patterns in an oceanic island arc setting.
- algae
- Ammonoidea
- Anthozoa
- biostratigraphy
- Bivalvia
- carbonate platforms
- carbonate rocks
- Carnian
- Cephalopoda
- clastic rocks
- Cnidaria
- coastal environment
- Coelenterata
- correlation
- depositional environment
- Foraminifera
- Invertebrata
- island arcs
- lithostratigraphy
- marine environment
- Mesozoic
- microfossils
- Mollusca
- new names
- nomenclature
- Norian
- Oregon
- paleogeography
- Plantae
- Porifera
- Protista
- Radiolaria
- reef environment
- sedimentary rocks
- shale
- shallow-water environment
- stratigraphic units
- stratotypes
- subtidal environment
- tectonostratigraphic units
- Tetrabranchiata
- Triassic
- United States
- Upper Triassic
- Wallowa County Oregon
- Wallowa Mountains
- Wallowa Terrane
- Martin Bridge Formation
- Eagle Creek Member
- Scotch Creek Member
- Summit Point Member
- BC Creek Member