Early to middle Cretaceous paleogeography of north-central British Columbia: stratigraphy and basin analysis of the Skeena Group

1997 ◽  
Vol 34 (12) ◽  
pp. 1644-1669 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kari N. Bassett ◽  
Karen L. Kleinspehn

The Lower–middle Cretaceous Skeena Group records the Early Cretaceous evolution of the southern margin of the Jura-Cretaceous Bowser basin in north-central British Columbia. We formalize Skeena Group nomenclature and present interpretations of three distinct paleogeographic and tectonic phases. During the first phase (Neocomian–Aptian), Skeena deposition was limited to a restricted tidal basin represented by Laventie Formation black-shale deposits, surrounded by coal-swamp deltas of the lower Bulkley Canyon Formation. The lower Skeena Group, correlated to the McEvoy Formation (Bowser Lake Group) in the northern basin, represents final filling of the Bowser foredeep produced by Jurassic accretion of the Intermontane Superterrane to North America. In the second phase (early Albian – Early Cenomanian), marine deposition transgressed eastward and southward accompanied by intrabasinal Rocky Ridge volcanism shedding volcanic detritus into the Kitsuns Creek Member of the Bulkley Canyon Formation. The Rocky Ridge Formation does not correlate northward to other Bowser basin fill but represents intrabasinal volcanism in a transtensional setting along the Omineca continental arc. During the final phase (early–middle Cenomanian), red-bed chert-pebble fluvial deposits of the Rocher Deboule Formation prograded westward, shifting the shoreline to tide-dominated deltas on the far western basin margin. The Rocher Deboule Formation correlates to the Devil's Claw Formation (Bowser Lake Group), the lower member of the Tango Creek Formation (Sustut Group), and, tentatively, to the lower conglomeratic Kasalka Group, all attributed to transpressional Omineca uplift and cannibalization of older Bowser basin fill. Thus the southern basin margin evolved from an Early Cretaceous flexural foredeep to a middle Cretaceous arc setting dominated by oblique convergence, first transtensional then transpressional.

1986 ◽  
Vol 23 (9) ◽  
pp. 1455-1458 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale A. Sketchley ◽  
A. J. Sinclair ◽  
C. I. Godwin

K–Ar dates on sericite from several gold–silver bearing white quartz veins in the Cassiar area indicate that mineralization occurred in the Early Cretaceous at about 130 Ma. Thus, these veins predate the mid-Cretaceous Cassiar batholith and Late Cretaceous and early Tertiary plutons in the immediate area. The Early Cretaceous date probably represents either a thermal precursor to emplacement of the Cassiar batholith or a structurally related event associated with allochthonous emplacement of the Sylvester Group. Either of these events may have caused circulation of the meteoric fluids responsible for the veins.


2020 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 149-176
Author(s):  
Nur Uddin Md Khaled Chowdhury ◽  
Dustin E. Sweet

The greater Taos trough located in north-central New Mexico represents one of numerous late Paleozoic basins that formed during the Ancestral Rocky Mountains deformation event. The late Paleozoic stratigraphy and basin geometry of the eastern portion of the greater Taos trough, also called the Rainsville trough, is little known because the strata are all in the subsurface. Numerous wells drilled through the late Paleozoic strata provide a scope for investigating subsurface stratigraphy and basin-fill architecture of the Rainsville trough. Lithologic data obtained predominantly from petrophysical well logs combined with available biostratigraphic data from the greater Taos trough allows construction of a chronostratigraphic framework of the basin fill. Isopach- and structure-maps indicate that the sediment depocenter was just east of the El Oro-Rincon uplift and a westerly thickening wedge-shaped basin-fill geometry existed during the Pennsylvanian. These relationships imply that the thrust system on the east side of the Precambrian-cored El Oro-Rincon uplift was active during the Pennsylvanian and segmented the greater Taos trough into the eastern Rainsville trough and the western Taos trough. During the Permian, sediment depocenter(s) shifted more southerly and easterly and strata onlap Precambrian basement rocks of the Sierra Grande uplift to the east and Cimarron arch to the north of the Rainsville trough. Permian strata appear to demonstrate minimal influence by faults that were active during the Pennsylvanian and sediment accumulation occurred both in the basinal area as well as on previous positive-relief highlands. A general Permian decrease in eustatic sea level and cessation of local-fault-controlled subsidence indicates that regional subsidence must have affected the region in the early Permian.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tu-Anh Nguyen ◽  
Michael B.W. Fyhn ◽  
Jeppe Ågård Kristensen ◽  
Lars Henrik Nielsen ◽  
Tonny B. Thomsen ◽  
...  

2005 ◽  
Vol 81 (3) ◽  
pp. 381-386
Author(s):  
S. Denise Allen

This article discusses collaborative research with the Office of the Wet'suwet'en Nation on their traditional territories in north-central British Columbia, Canada, a forest-dependent region where contemporary and traditional forest resources management regimes overlap. In-depth personal interviews with the hereditary chiefs and concept mapping were used to identify social-ecological linkages in Wet'suwet'en culture to inform the development of culturally sensitive social criteria and indicators of sustainable forest management (SFM) in this region. The preliminary results demonstrate how the CatPac II software tool can be applied to identify key component concepts and linkages in local definitions of SFM, and translate large volumes of (oral) qualitative data into manageable information resources for forest managers and decision-makers. Key words: social criteria and indicators, sustainable forest management, qualitative research, Wet'suwet'en


1981 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 457-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. M. Henderson ◽  
D. G. Perry

Late Early Jurassic heteroporid bryozoa occur in arenaceous carbonates near Turnagain Lake, north-central British Columbia. The occurrence of Heteropora tipperi n. sp. marks the first documentation of Early Jurassic cyclostome bryozoa in North America. The associated fauna, comprising the ammonite Harpoceras, the foraminifer Reinholdella, and the pelecypod Weyla, establish the age as Early Toarcian. Other associated biota include an endolithic green alga(e), which is demonstrated to have a commensal relationship with H. tipperi n. sp. Sedimentologic and biotic data from the host strata point to a shallow, temperate, high-energy, normal marine environment.


1982 ◽  
Vol 90 (6) ◽  
pp. 699-715 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlton C. Allen ◽  
Michael J. Jercinovic ◽  
Jaclyn S. B. Allen

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