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Depositional Systems in Canyon Group (Pennsylvanian. System), North-Central Texas. Digital Download

RI0082D

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RI0082D. Depositional Systems in the Canyon Group (Pennsylvanian System), North-Central Texas, by A. W. Erxleben. 76 p., 33 figs., 9 plates, 3 appendices, 1975. doi.org/10.23867?RI0082D.  Downloadable PDF

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ABSTRACT
The Canyon Group (Missourian Series) is a sequence of westward-dipping, genetically related carbonate and terrigenous clastic facies that crop out in a northeast-southwest belt across North-Central Texas. The section includes stratigraphic units between the base of the Palo Pinto Limestone and the top of the Home Creek Limestone.


Surface and subsurface studies within thirteen counties indicate that the terrigenous clastic rocks are principally component facies of high-constructive delta systems. The Perrin delta system repeatedly prograded westward and northwestward from source areas in the Ouachita foldbelt. Algal-crinoid banks flanked the Perrin delta system on the northeast and southwest. A typical vertical deltaic sequence includes (upward) (a) organic-rich prodelta mudstone, devoid of invertebrate fossils; (b) thin, distal delta-front sandstone and mudstone, displaying graded beds, sole marks, and flow rolls; (c) thicker proximal delta-front sandstone, exhibiting contorted beds, flow rolls, and contemporaneous faults; (d) locally contorted distributary-mouth bar sandstone; and (e) distributary channel sandstone, containing abundant trough cross-stratification and local clay-chip conglomerate. Thin, coal-bearing delta-plain deposits occur locally on top of deltaic sequences. All delta facies are rich in plant debris.


During delta abandonment and destruction, shallow bay-lagoon environments developed. Destructional facies include bioturbated sandy mudstone, burrowed sandstone, and thin, platy argillaceous limestone with abundant invertebrate fossils. Fossiliferous mudstone facies grade upward into transgressive shelf-carbonate facies commonly composed of phylloid algal-crinoid biomicrudite and local intraclastic biosparite shoal facies. Shelf carbonates include onlapping sheetlike deposits, thick, elongate bank deposits which stood above the sea floor with slight bathymetric relief, massive platform carbonate, and shelf-edge reef-bank accumulations.


The Henrietta fan-delta system, occurring exclusively in the subsurface of Montague, Clay, Wichita, Archer, and Baylor Counties, is composed of thick wedges of feldspathic sandstone and conglomerate that were deposited by high-gradient fluvial systems which built southwestward into northern Texas from source areas in the Wichita-Arbuckle Mountains of southern Oklahoma.



Keywords:
Archer County, Baylor County, Clay County, Canyon Group, depositional systems, Home Creek Limestone, Palo Pinto Limestone, Perrin delta system, Missourian, North-Central Texas, Pennsylvanian, subsurface, Texas



Citation
Erxleben, A. W., 1975, Depositional Systems in the Canyon Group (Pennsylvanian System), North-Central Texas: The University of Texas at Austin, Bureau of Economic Geology, Report of Investigations No. 82, 76 p.

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