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Ichnology and depositional environments of the Upper Cretaceous Dinosaur Park – Bearpaw formation transition in the Cypress Hills region of Southwestern Saskatchewan, Canada

Abstract The upper Campanian Dinosaur Park Formation (DPF) is a south- and eastward-thinning fluvial to marginal-marine clastic wedge in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin. The DPF is overlain by the… Click to show full abstract

Abstract The upper Campanian Dinosaur Park Formation (DPF) is a south- and eastward-thinning fluvial to marginal-marine clastic wedge in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin. The DPF is overlain by the Bearpaw Formation (BF), a fully marine clastic succession representing the final major transgression of this epicontinental sea across western North America. In southwestern Saskatchewan, the DPF is comprised of marginal-marine coal, carbonaceous shale, and heterolithic siltstone and sandstone grading vertically into marine sandstone and shale of the BF. Historically these deposits have been interpreted as the record of fluvial delta systems along a paleocoastline. This study revisits this interpretation using integration of ichnologic, sedimentologic, and sequence stratigraphic concepts. Detailed facies analysis indicates the upper DPF does not record sedimentation in a delta system, but rather was deposited in a low-relief coastal plain with a wave-dominated, tidally influenced, fluvially modified shoreline. Marginal-marine facies, interpreted as lagoons, tidal flats and estuaries, are bioturbated, showing a typical brackish-water trace-fossil assemblage, including Asterosoma isp., Chondrites isp., Cylindrichnus concentricus, Teichichnus rectus, and Skolithos isp. Fine-grained sandstone was deposited in an estuarine mouth-bar and barrier-island complex that protected the coast from wave reworking. As the seaway transgressed across the coast, fully marine wave-dominated parasequences replaced those of the coastal plain. Typical trace fossils include Asterosoma isp., Chondrites isp., Diplocraterion isp., Nereites missouriensis, Phycosiphon incertum, Planolites isp., Rhizocorallium isp., and Zoophycos isp., reflecting open, fully marine conditions. This study provides new insights into the evolution of depositional environments in the Late Cretaceous of southwestern Saskatchewan, and provides a framework for further geological and paleontological studies ongoing in the region.

Keywords: bearpaw formation; depositional environments; ichnology; southwestern saskatchewan; dinosaur park

Journal Title: Cretaceous Research
Year Published: 2019

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