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Sedimentological and geochemical insights into the opening of the Cretaceous interior seaway: The Lower Cretaceous Skull Creek Formation, Colorado

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AAPG BULLETIN
卷 107, 期 5, 页码 761-784

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AMER ASSOC PETROLEUM GEOLOGIST
DOI: 10.1306/10242221080

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This study addresses the uncertainties regarding the depositional environments, stratigraphic correlations, and paleo-geographic evolution of the Skull Creek Formation. Through the integration of sedimentological and geochemical data from cores and well logs, this study provides a better understanding of the formation and its significance in the early Western Interior seaway. The formation is divided into three units, each representing a different stage in the paleogeographic evolution of the seaway.
The Skull Creek Formation is a succession of marine mudstones and sandstones within the Lower Cretaceous Dakota Group. The formation contains the earliest record of marine deposition and ocean connection in the Western Interior seaway, yet its depositional environments, stratigraphic correlations, and paleo-geographic evolution remain poorly understood. This study ad-dresses those uncertainties and presents new sedimentological and geochemical data from four cores and 38 well logs in the central Denver Basin, integrating them into previous outcrop and subsurface studies of the Skull Creek Formation.Three regional flooding surfaces divide the Skull Creek For-mation into informal lower, middle, and upper units, which record the paleogeographic evolution of the early Western Inte-rior seaway. The lower Skull Creek Formation was deposited in a restricted lobe of the Arctic Ocean, contains predominately oxy-genated, organic-matter-poor basinal to lower slope facies and includes the Eldorado Springs Member, a northwest-southeast- oriented, wave-dominated sandstone. The Eldorado Springs Member is the only documented coeval shoreline of the Skull Creek seaway in the Rocky Mountain region. The middle Skull Creek Formation exhibits anoxic, organic-matter-rich, calcare-ous basinal facies and is hypothesized to represent the earliest connection between the Arctic and Tethyan lobes of the West-ern Interior seaway. A unique bioclastic calcarernite facies in the middle Skull Creek Formation is interpreted to signal the onset of this seaway connection, and an associated increase in bottom current strength and biological productivity. These lithofacies persist into the upper Skull Creek Formation, indicating the Western Interior seaway remained connected until the deposi-tion of the overlying Muddy Formation.

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