Depositional history of Devonian to lower Carboniferous (Tournaisian) strata, northern Wyoming and southern Montana, USA

Author:

Hu Mingxi12,Myrow Paul M.1ORCID,Fike David A.2,di Pasquo Mercedes3,Zatoń Michał4,Fischer Woodward W.5,Coates Michael6

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Geology, Colorado College, Colorado Springs, Colorado 80903, USA

2. 2Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri 63130, USA

3. 3Laboratory of Palynostratigraphy and Paleobotany, Centro de Investigación Científica y de Transferencia de Tecnologìa a la Producción, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, Gobierno de la Provincia de Entre Ríos, Universidad Autónoma de Entre Ríos, E3105BWA Diamante, Entre Ríos, Argentina

4. 4Institute of Earth Sciences, University of Silesia in Katowice, Będzińska 60, 41-200 Sosnowiec, Poland

5. 5Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, USA

6. 6Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA

Abstract

Abstract The lower Frasnian (Upper Devonian) Maywood Formation records incision of valleys into lower Paleozoic bedrock in fluvial to estuarine settings in northern Wyoming and deposition in estuarine to marine environments in southern Montana (USA). A distinctive fossil assemblage of microconchids, plant compression fossils, fish fossils, and microspores represent fauna and flora that lived in, and adjacent to, salinity-stressed ecological niches in the upper reaches of the Maywood valleys. A similar fossil assemblage is recorded in older Devonian valley-fill deposits of the Lower Devonian Beartooth Butte Formation, indicating that valley incision and subsequent transgression, occurred repeatedly over a span of nearly 30 million years with organisms tracking the marine incursions into the valleys. The fossil charcoal in the Maywood Formation captures a record of fire in adjacent terrestrial ecosystems. The amount of dioxygen (O2) was thus above the fire window level (16% by volume) and might have been near modern levels in the earliest Late Devonian atmosphere. The nearshore deposits of the Maywood Formation are overlain by extensive shallow carbonate shelf strata of the Jefferson Formation, likely resulting from a global transgression in the earliest Frasnian. A paired positive and negative δ13Ccarbonate [carb] isotopic excursion in the Jefferson with a range of >6‰ is a signal of the globally recognized “punctata” Event. The unconformably overlying Madison Limestone is lower Carboniferous, except for a thin basal Upper Devonian unit with marine palynomorphs. The Madison regionally records eastward transgression and establishment of widespread marine deposition. It also contains two positive δ13Ccarb excursions (up to ~7.5‰) that make up the mid-Tournaisian (= Kinderhookian–Osagean boundary) carbon isotope excursion (TICE/KOBE). These isotope data provide a framework for regional and global correlation of northern Rocky Mountain strata and an archive of environmental and evolutionary change during the middle–late Paleozoic transition.

Publisher

Geological Society of America

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