Ordovician of the Great Basin


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Geology Studies


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Field Trip Guide Book


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Sequence Stratigraphy, Chemostratigraphy, and Biostratigraphy of Lower Ordovician Units in Northeastern and Western Central Utah


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The Lower to Middle Ordovician Garden City Formation and Pogonip Group are coeval successions of mixed carbonate and siliciclastic rocks deposited under normal marine conditions on a shallow carbonate ramp on the western margin of Laurentia. The Garden City Formation was deposited in the Northern Utah Basin and the Pogonip Group was deposited in the Ibex Basin. These two basins experienced different rates of thermal subsidence following Neoproterozoic rifting along the western margin of Laurentia resulting in significant thickness differences between rock units and varying lithologic expressions of eustatic change. This study provides a unique opportunity to examine the lithologic, geochemical, and paleontological responses to eustatic oscillations of two coeval sedimentary basins in Utah that formed under different tectonic settings and subsidence rates. The Garden City Formation is composed of fourteen lithotypes and the Pogonip Group is composed of eleven lithotypes. These lithotypes mainly represent depositional environments ranging from inner ramp and middle ramp with minor outer ramp deposits. Many lithologies appear to be storm influenced due to the presence of abundant rip-up clasts (intraclasts), fragmented bioclasts, and occasional mega-ripples. Other lithologies have been extensively bioturbated and burrowed. Nine stratigraphic sequences have previously been identified within the Pogonip Group. Eight equivalent, albeit compressed, sequences within the Garden City Formation were located using biostratigraphic and chemostratigraphic correlations, and increases in insoluble residues often found at the bases of sequence boundaries. Sequences are expressed as deepening-upward packages containing silty/sandy lowstand deposits that transition into wackestones and lime mudstone-rich highstand deposits. Several sequence boundaries appear to coincide with conodont and/or trilobite extinction events. Important sequence boundaries mark the Sauk III-m and Sauk IV-m transition and the Ibexian- Whiterockian Series boundary. Meter-scale cycles are common and likely related to Milankovitch cyclicity. Insoluble residue increases upsection at each location which may indicate a gradual overall drop in sea level due to the onset of the regressive upper portion of the Sauk III supersequence. Insoluble residue from the Pogonip Group ranges from 1.2 to 84.7 wt. % with an average of 16.0 wt. % ℗ł 0.7 wt. %. Insoluble residue from the Garden City Formation ranges from 1.5 to 63.8 wt. % with an average of 13.4 wt. % ℗ł 1.0 wt. %. New stable carbon isotope data (Îþ13C) from the Garden City Formation and the Pogonip Group range from -2.92 to 1.23 0́ʻ V-PDB and -2.19 to 0.56 0́ʻ V-PDB, respectively. Four distinct Îþ13C trends are recognized in both sections: 1) a drop in Îþ13C from positive values between 0.2-1.0 0́ʻ to negative values approaching -1.0 0́ʻ near the base of the Ordovician, 2) a 0.5 to 1.0 0́ʻ positive Îþ13C excursion near the top of the Rossodus manitouensis Zone, 3) a drop in Îþ13C values to near -2.0 0́ʻ through most of the Acodus deltatus -Oneotodus costatus Zone, and 4) a gradual increase in Îþ13C from - 2.0 0́ʻ to -1.0 0́ʻ throughout the remainder of the sections. Îþ13C of the Garden City Formation and the Pogonip Group appear to be correlative based on these distinct trends. This correlative relationship was verified by the lowest occurrence of conodont species Scolopodus filosus and Scalpellodus n. sp. A of the Low Diversity Interval which coincides with the positive Îþ13C excursion in both the Garden City Formation and the Pogonip Group. New Îþ13C data likely represent global primary seawater chemistry based on the correlation of similar Îþ13C trends from the Argentine Precordillera and western Newfoundland.




Petroleum Abstracts


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A Global Synthesis of the Ordovician System: Part 2


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The Ordovician was one of the longest of the geological periods, characterized by major magmatic and tectonic activity, an immense biodiversification, swings in climate and sea levels, and the first Phanerozoic mass extinction. ‘A Global Synthesis of the Ordovician System’ is presented in two volumes in The Geological Society, Special Publications. Whereas the first volume (SP532) concentrates on general aspects and a synthesis of the Ordovician geology of Europe, this volume (SP533) includes reviews of Ordovician successions of most other parts of the world. The classic successions of the Ordovician basins of North America are presented, as well as those of China where several of the Ordovician Global Boundary Stratotype Sections and Points are defined. The volume also includes syntheses of the Ordovician geology of Africa, South America, most regions of Asia from the Near to the Far East along with Central Asia, as well as Australia, New Zealand and Antarctica.