The Great American Carbonate Bank


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Hardcover plus DVD







Facies Description and Interpretation of the Upper Lower Hickory Sandstone, Riley Formation, Central Texas


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Present models suggest that fluvial and marine depositional patterns were distinct from modern patterns prior to the appearance of land plants. Although these models are likely correct, problems exist when one attempts to distinguish between fluvial and shallow marine deposits in pre-Silurian strata, making it difficult to accurately determine depositional patterns. The lack of land plants and scarcity of body and trace fossils, especially in Precambrian and early Cambrian strata, make identification difficult. Based on core data and limited outcrops, the Lower Hickory Sandstone, a late Cambrian sandstone, has been interpreted to progress from fluvial to shallow marine. These data have allowed the development of an overall depositional model, but minimal detail of facies changes is available. Based on the limited data, both deltaic and estuarine models have been suggested for the Lower Hickory. Mining of the Lower Hickory for frac sand has created highwalls in the CarmeuseNA Mine, which provides an opportunity to study facies changes at this site. The CarmeuseNA Mine, located in McCulloch County, Texas, has exposed the formation along ~500 m long and 20 m-high faces, respectively. Because of limited exposure, only the south and west walls, as well as part of the east wall, could be examined. Digital photographs of the faces were mosaiced using standard photogrammetrical practices to produce visual representation of the highwalls. Bedding geometry was then mapped on the digital images to facilitate a detailed interpretation of the depositional process. Core and well data were used to map Hickory thickness to produce an isopach map. Four primary facies were observed in the quarry, dominated by small-scale and large-scale cross-bedding. Paleocurrents are generally unidirectional to the southsoutheast indicating a braided fluvial origin, but rarely opposing directions are seen. Bioturbation is rare low in the section, but increases upwards. Together with the rare herringbone cross-bedding, clay drapes, and bioturbation, a tidal influence is strongly suggested. The model suggested is a braided stream setting influenced and reworked by tides. A braided-delta fed by braided streams guided by a ridge and swale-dominated setting, which served as the sediment supply for the delta, is proposed.




Depositional History and Stratigraphic Evolution of the Upper Wilcox Group and Reklaw Formation, Northern Bee County, Tx - RI284


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Report of Investigations No. 284, "Depositional history and stratigraphic evolution of the Upper Wilcox Group and Reklaw Formation, northern Bee County, Texas" is a detailed study of the upper Wilcox and Reklaw stratigraphic succession in a 190-mi2 (~490-km2) area along the upper Wilcox shelf margin in northern Bee County, Texas. By interpreting and mapping 19 high-frequency, fourth-order regressive-transgressive sequences, it demonstrates that the upper Wilcox to Reklaw succession contains greater variability in depositional systems, facies, and reservoir sandstone-body geometry than previously documented.










Annual Meeting


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