Depositional system and lake-stage control on microbialite morphology, Green River Formation, eastern Uinta Basin, Colorado and Utah, U.S.A.

2021 ◽  
Vol 91 (6) ◽  
pp. 636-661
Author(s):  
Abdulah Eljalafi ◽  
J. Frederick Sarg

ABSTRACT Lake-margin lacustrine carbonates of the Green River Formation, in the eastern Uinta basin of Colorado and Utah, occur interbedded with fluvial and shoreline-parallel sandstone and shale. Microbial bindstones were deposited in a saline-alkaline lake during and after the Early Eocene Climate Optimum (EECO) (52–50 million years ago) that is characterized by global hot-house conditions, elevated atmospheric CO2, and highly fluctuating climate conditions. The stratigraphic architecture, chemostratigraphy, and morphology of the microbialites and other associated carbonate beds can be related to these climatic conditions. Three facies associations are recognized in the carbonate units across the lake margin from upper littoral to lower sublittoral environments: facies association 1, delta proximal non-microbial carbonates, characterized by quartzose bioclastic, peloidal, intraclastic packstones and grainstones–rudstones, quartose peloid wackestones and sandy oil shale; facies association 2, microbialite associated non-microbial carbonates, composed of ostracod, ooilitic, peloidal packstones–grainstones and intraclastic packstones, grainstones and rudstones; and facies association 3, microbial carbonates, consisting of diverse forms of stromatolitic and thrombolitic lithofacies. Multiple scales of carbonate cyclicity are suggested by shifts of δ18O and δ13C stable isotopes and deepening-upward microbialite facies. High-frequency cycles, on the order of 1 to 5 m thickness, are characterized by positive shifts in stable isotopes and interpreted deepening trends from littoral to lower sublittoral conditions. Large-scale trends, on the order of tens to hundreds of meters thickness record long-term lake changes, including: 1) sparse microbialite deposition during initial fresh conditions in lake stage 1, with low macro-structure diversity and light δ18O and δ13C isotope values; 2) transitional lake stage 2 corresponding to moderate macro-structural diversity, large meter-scale biostromal and biohermal buildups, and a positive shift in δ18O and δ13C isotope values that suggest increasing saline and alkaline conditions; 3) a highly fluctuating lake stage 3 that contains the highest microbialite macro-structural diversity and marks the interval of heaviest δ18O and δ13C isotope values, suggesting the greatest lake restriction, and the highest salinity and alkalinity conditions; and 4) a rising lake stage 4 that marks the lowest microbialite macro-structure diversity and a reversal in trend of δ18O and δ13C isotope values, that indicate deepening and freshening conditions.

2016 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 119-223 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Borer

Lacustrine strata of a portion of the Green River Formation studied in outcrops along Raven Ridge and in the subsurface around Red Wash Field in the northeastern Uinta Basin represent cyclic storm-dominated shoreface to deep lake deposition within a syntectonic embayment on the margin of Eocene Lake Uinta. The study interval consists of the lower Green River Formation, including the Douglas Creek, Garden Gulch, and lower Parachute Creek members, from the top of the underlying Wasatch to the Mahogany Zone of the Parachute Creek Member. Data consists of 11,900 ft (3627 m) of section measured at 23 locations across Raven Ridge, including 7,800 ft (2377 m) of hand-held gamma-ray scintillometer measurements, and over 500 wells in the greater Red Wash Field area, including pay zone analysis correlated to stratigraphy in the field. Facies analysis, as the basis for an integrated stratigraphic approach, reveals a seven-fold hierarchy of stratigraphic cycles ranging from two orders of large-scale cycles to five orders of progressively higher-frequency (smaller scale) shoreface-lake cycles across an 18-mile (29 km) long and 1900-ft (579 m) thick dip-oriented stratigraphic transect. This study recognized twenty-two facies grouped into eight facies tracts using Walther’s Law for two composite shoreface successions: one for a siliciclastic storm-graded shoreface profile that was dominant during times of regression and one for a carbonate profile that dominated in times of transgression. Two important regional facies trends across Raven Ridge include: 1) greater proportions of mudstone facies present in the southern, upper portion of the Green River Formation; and 2) significantly higher proportion of bioturbated sandstone in the northern, lower portion of the formation. The long-term 2nd-order transgression of Lake Uinta from base to top of the study interval results in an evolution from a low-gradient shoreline with marshes, ponds, and sand/mud flats to a high-gradient high-energy profile composed of spits and shorefaces that grew southward away from the emergent highlands. A composite storm-graded shelf profile shows how trough, hummocky, and swaley cross stratification type and amalgamation style change offshore proportionally to contain mud-dominated tempestites, erosional storm furrows, and oil shale. In the most offshore positions, diastasis cracks caused by differential loading are common. The lacustrine shoreface profile is compressed in the Green River Fm. in the study area with narrow facies tracts and large local gradient changes as a result of different responses to sediment supply. As a lake grows and shorelines migrate, the increase in accommodation is balanced, or in-phase, by a corresponding increase in sediment supply resulting in shoreface progradation keeping up with lake-level rise. As the shoreface stacks vertically during the rise, over steepening and failure of the profile generates gravity-flow sandstone facies. Little reworking of hummocky cross stratification high on the profile was observed, probably because wave power was limited by a shallow fair-weather wave-base. These differences also result in more symmetrical lacustrine shoreface cycles, with a large proportion of sediment partitioned into rise hemicycles, as opposed to the classical fall-asymmetric marine para-sequence which tends to have little to no strata preserved in the rise hemicycle along most of the shoreface profile. Landward-stepping lacustrine shoreface cycles are more common during the early rise portions of larger-scale 3rd-order megacycles for similar reasons. Strata at Raven Ridge support the concept that Eocene Lake Uinta was chemically stratified, or meromictic, at least during certain periods. The equable subtropical Eocene paleoclimate is interpreted to be the most important control on meromixis. Chemical stratification played a critical role in the development and preservation of organic matter, as evidenced by oil shale facies. The equable climate, however, might also have made the lake prone to thermal stratification. A paradox exists in the storm dominance of the lacustrine shorefaces and the coeval lake stratification: wave energy apparently was insufficient to break through the strong chemocline. Red Wash Field, directly downdip from the Raven Ridge outcrop belt, is an example of an oil field in a setting where the lake margin is not coincident with a structural feature: a “non-coincident” margin. Reservoirs mostly are present in the 6th-order aggradational shoreface cycles that are interpreted to have accumulated in the rise portions of 3rd-order megacycles. The best reservoir facies are trough, hummocky, and swaley cross-stratified sandstone deposited by storm processes and structureless sandstone probably derived from over steepening and failure of the shoreface during transgression. A petroleum accumulation model encompassing the Red Wash-Raven Ridge area proposes that lacustrine-sourced petroleum originated from an over-pressured mature cell in the Altamont-Bluebell field region. Oil migrated updip through leaky seals and became trapped in reservoirs within the non-coincident lake margin strata. An irregular shoreline configuration and compaction folds at Red Wash Field trapped petroleum. After reaching spill point at Red Wash Field, oil migrated farther updip to Raven Ridge and Asphalt Ridge, forming tar sand accumulations.


2016 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grace Ford ◽  
David Pyles ◽  
Marieke Dechesne

A continuous window into the fluvial-lacustrine basin-fill succession of the Uinta Basin is exposed along a 48-mile (77-kilometer) transect up the modern Green River from Three Fords to Sand Wash in Desolation Canyon, Utah. In ascending order the stratigraphic units are: 1) Flagstaff Limestone, 2) lower Wasatch member of the Wasatch Formation, 3) middle Wasatch member of the Wasatch Formation, 4) upper Wasatch member of the Wasatch Formation, 5) Uteland Butte member of the lower Green River Formation, 6) lower Green River Formation, 7) Renegade Tongue of the lower Green River Formation, 8) middle Green River Formation, and 9) the Mahogany oil shale zone marking the boundary between the middle and upper Green River Formations. This article uses regional field mapping, geologic maps, photographs, and descriptions of the stratigraphic unit including: 1) bounding surfaces, 2) key upward stratigraphic characteristics within the unit, and 3) longitudinal changes along the river transect. This information is used to create a north-south cross section through the basin-fill succession and a detailed geologic map of Desolation Canyon. The cross section documents stratigraphic relationships previously unreported and contrasts with earlier interpretations in two ways: 1) abrupt upward shifts in the stratigraphy documented herein, contrast with the gradual interfingering relationships proposed by Ryder et al., (1976) and Fouch et al., (1994), 2) we document fluvial deposits of the lower and middle Wasatch to be distinct and more widespread than previously recognized. In addition, we document that the Uteland Butte member of the lower Green River Formation was deposited in a lacustrine environment in Desolation Canyon. Two large-scale (member-scale) upward patterns are noted: Waltherian, and non-Waltherian. The upward successions in Waltherian progressions record progradation or retrogradation of a linked fluvial-lacustrine system across the area; whereas the upward successions in non-Waltherian progressions record large-scale changes in the depositional system that are not related to progradation or retrogradation of the ancient lacustrine shoreline. Four Waltherian progressions are noted: 1) the Flagstaff Limestone to lower Wasatch Formation member records the upward transition from lacustrine to fluvial—or shallowing-upward succession; 2) the upper Wasatch to Uteland Butte records the upward transition from fluvial to lacustrine—or a deepening upward succession; 3) the Uteland Butte to Renegade Tongue records the upward transition from lacustrine to fluvial—a shallowing-upward succession; and 4) the Renegade Tongue to Mahogany oil shale interval records the upward transition from fluvial to lacustrine—a deepening upward succession. The two non-Waltherian progressions in the study area are: 1) the lower to middle Wasatch, which records the abrupt shift from low to high net-sand content fluvial system, and 2) the middle to upper Wasatch, which records the abrupt shift from high to intermediate net-sand content fluvial system.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren P. Birgenheier ◽  
◽  
Ryan D. Gall ◽  
Ellen M. Rosencrans ◽  
Michael D. Vanden Berg

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