Stromatolites and basin analysis: an example from the upper proterozoic of northwestern Canada
Autor: | Grant M. Young, D.G.F. Long |
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Rok vydání: | 1976 |
Předmět: |
Shore
geography geography.geographical_feature_category biology Paleontology Structural basin Sedimentary basin Oceanography biology.organism_classification Precambrian Stromatolite Group (stratigraphy) Sedimentary basin analysis Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Geology Channel (geography) Earth-Surface Processes |
Zdroj: | Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 19:303-318 |
ISSN: | 0031-0182 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0031-0182(76)90031-6 |
Popis: | Stromatolites have been used for inter-basinal biostratigraphic correlation, rock-stratigraphic correlation within individual sedimentary basins and for palaeoecological studies of various kinds. In the northern part of Victoria Island stromatolites are abundant in the uppermost part of the Gelenelg Formation, which is the lowest unit of the upper Proterozoic Shaler Group. Measurable attributes of these stromatolites include elongate mounds, intermound channel fillings, ridges and grooves, elongate collumns and inclined columns. In a widespread stromatolitic bank that forms the upper part of the Glenelg Formation, and also in stromatolites of the overlying Reynolds Point Formation, several of these features show a preferred orientation in a northeasterly direction. Herringbone cross-beds in associated sandy oolitic limestones show a northeast—southwest bimodal-bipolar distribution that is probably related to tidal activity. This similarity of directional features suggests that the stromatolite orientations are also likely to have been tidally influenced. If each stromatolitic bank were deposited diachronously then the northeasterly preferred orientation may be explained as being due to tidal currents active at a migrating shoreline that trended in a northwest-southeast direction. Alternatively, if, in the absence of metazoan competitors, the stromatolite builders contemporaneously occupied a large part of the basin floor, their northeasterly orientation may reflect tidal currents parallel to the length of an elongate embayment of the Precambrian sea, analogous in many ways to the present-day Persian Gulf. Such an interpretation, involving parallelism between coastline and elongate stromatolites, would differ from those of most earlier reports, in which elongate stromatolites have generally been assumed to have been oriented normal to the ancient shoreline. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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