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TitleSedimentology and stratigraphic evolution of a tidally influenced marginal-marine complex: The Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation, Athabasca Oil Sands deposit, northeastern Alberta
Publication TypeThesis
Year of Publication2003
AuthorsCrerar, E. E.
VolumeEarth Sciences
IssueM. Sc.
Place PublishedUniversity of Ottawa
Publication Languageen
Keywordsfossil
Abstract

Within the Lewis study area, McMurray Formation strata comprise 4 facies associations that form a depositional continuum of braided-fluvial (FA1), tidally-influenced braided- to low-accommodation meandering-fluvial and meandering-tidal channel-fills (FA2), associated overbank (FA3), and open-estuarine tidal flat deposits (FA4). The primary reservoir occurs in transgressive FA2 deposits.

Lower-FA2 channels incise older water-wet FA1sand and consist of medium to locally-coarse, bitumen-saturated sand with rare to locally common pin-stripe laminated and/or 1-5 cm thick mud beds. Channels were initially confined by steep valley walls formed along the sub-Cretaceous unconformity. As a consequence, coeval interchannel sediment (FA3) was cannibalized by lateral channel migration and occurs only as common mud-clasts. The net result was the accumulation of a sand-rich, sheet-like deposit with locally-preserved fine-grained interchannel deposits, suggesting a high rate of lateral versus vertical accretion.

With the filling and elimination of the irregular paleotopography along the unconformity, upper-FA2 channels became unconfined and formed thick, areally extensive inclined heterolithic stratification (IHS) deposits. Similarly, coeval interchannel deposits are more widely-distributed and thickly preserved compared to underlying strata. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)

URLhttp://search.proquest.com/docview/305246524
Topics

Geology

Locational Keywords

Fort McMurray, Lewis study area

Active Link

http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/58053872

Group

Science

Citation Key44887

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