4.6 Article

Syn-rift mass flow generated 'tectonofacies' and 'tectonosequences' of the Kingston Peak Formation, Death Valley, California, and their bearing on supposed Neoproterozoic panglacial climates

Journal

SEDIMENTOLOGY
Volume 68, Issue 1, Pages 352-381

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/sed.12781

Keywords

Debrite; Neoproterozoic glaciation; rift basin; tectonofacies; tectonosequences

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Province of Ontario

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The Kingston Peak Formation in the Death Valley region of the USA is a geologically significant site, recording key events in the evolution of Neoproterozoic rift basins. Comprised mainly of tectonofacies influenced by local faulting, the formation's sedimentology and stratigraphy are controlled by faulting and earthquake activity rather than global glacial climates.
The Kingston Peak Formation of the Pahrump Group in the Death Valley region of the Basin and Range Province, USA, is the thick (over 3 km) mixed siliciclastic-carbonate fill of a long-lived structurally-complex Neoproterozoic rift basin and is recognized by some as a key 'climatostratigraphic' succession recording panglacial Snowball Earth events. A facies analysis of the Kingston Peak Formation shows it to be largely composed of 'tectonofacies' which are subaqueous mass flow deposits recording cannibalization of older Pahrump carbonate strata exposed by local faulting. Facies include siltstone, sandstone and conglomerate turbidites, carbonate megabreccias (olistoliths) and related breccias, and interbedded debrites. Secondary facies are thin carbonates and pillowed basalts. Four distinct associations of tectonofacies ('base-of-scarp'; FA1, 'mid-slope'; FA2, 'base-of-slope'; FA3, and a 'carbonate margin' association; FA4) reflect the initiation and progradation of deep water clastic wedges at the foot of fault scarps. 'Tectonosequences' record episodes of fault reactivation resulting in substantial increases in accommodation space and water depths, the collapse of fault scarps and consequent downslope mass flow events. Carbonates of FA4 record the cessation of tectonic activity and resulting sediment starvation ending the growth of clastic wedges. Tectonosequences are nested within regionally-extensive tectono-stratigraphic units of earlier workers that are hundreds to thousands of metres in thickness, recording the long-term evolution of the rifted Laurentian continental margin during the protracted breakup of Rodinia. Debrite facies of the Kingston Peak Formation are classically described as ice-contact glacial deposits recording globally-correlative panglacials but they result from partial to complete subaqueous mixing of fault-generated coarse-grained debris and fine-grained distal sediment on a slope conditioned by tectonic activity. The sedimentology (tectonofacies) and stratigraphy (tectonosequences) of the Kingston Peak Formation reflect a fundamental control on local sedimentation in the basin by faulting and likely earthquake activity, not by any global glacial climate.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available