4.6 Article

Recognition of strong seasonality and climatic cyclicity in an ancient, fluvially dominated, tidally influenced point bar: Middle McMurray Formation, Lower Steepbank River, north-eastern Alberta, Canada

Journal

SEDIMENTOLOGY
Volume 63, Issue 3, Pages 552-585

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/sed.12228

Keywords

Brackish; decadal climate cycles; fluvial-marine transition; IHS; point bar; seasonality; tidal-fluvial

Categories

Funding

  1. Carigalli Hess of the BITE 2 (Bars In Tidal Environments Phase 2) research consortium
  2. Devon of the BITE 2 (Bars In Tidal Environments Phase 2) research consortium
  3. Nexen of the BITE 2 (Bars In Tidal Environments Phase 2) research consortium
  4. Shell of the BITE 2 (Bars In Tidal Environments Phase 2) research consortium
  5. Statoil of the BITE 2 (Bars In Tidal Environments Phase 2) research consortium
  6. Total of the BITE 2 (Bars In Tidal Environments Phase 2) research consortium
  7. Canadian Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council

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Inclined heterolithic stratification in the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation, exposed along the Steepbank River in north-eastern Alberta, Canada, accumulated on point bars of a 30 to 40 m deep continental-scale river in the fluvial-marine transition. This inclined heterolithic stratification consists of two alternating lithologies, sand and fine-grained beds. Sand beds were deposited rapidly by unidirectional currents and contain little or no bioturbation. Fine-grained beds contain rare tidal structures, and are intensely bioturbated by low-diversity ichnofossil assemblages. The alternations between the sand and fine-grained beds are probably caused by strong variations in fluvial discharge; that are believed to be seasonal (probably annual) in duration. The sand beds accumulated during river floods, under fluvially dominated conditions when the water was fresh, whereas the fine-grained beds accumulated during the late stages of the river flood and deposition continued under tidally influenced brackish-water conditions during times of low-river flow (i.e. the interflood periods). These changes reflect the annual migration in the positions of the tidal and salinity limits within the fluvial-marine transition that result from changes in river discharge. Sand and fine-grained beds are cyclically organized in the studied outcrops forming metre-scale cycles. A single metre-scale cycle is defined by a sharp base, an upward decrease in sand-bed thickness and upward increases in the preservation of fine-grained beds and the intensity of bioturbation. Metre-scale cycles are interpreted to be the product of a longer term (decadal) cyclicity in fluvial discharge, probably caused by fluctuations in ocean or solar dynamics. The volumetric dominance of river-flood deposits within the succession suggests that accumulation occurred in a relatively landward position within the fluvial-marine transition. This study shows that careful observation can reveal much about the interplay of processes within the fluvial-marine transition, which in turn provides a powerful tool for determining the palaeo-environmental location of a deposit within the fluvial-marine transition.

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