A marine and terrestrial Sirius group succession, middle Beardmore glacier Queen Alexandra range, Transantarctic mountains, Antarctica

被引:56
作者
Webb, PN
Harwood, DM
Mabin, MGC
McKelvey, BC
机构
[1] OHIO STATE UNIV,BYRD POLAR RES CTR,COLUMBUS,OH 43210
[2] UNIV NEBRASKA,DEPT GEOL,LINCOLN,NE 68588
[3] JAMES COOK UNIV N QUEENSLAND,DEPT GEOG,TOWNSVILLE,QLD 4811,AUSTRALIA
[4] UNIV NEW ENGLAND,DEPT GEOL & GEOPHYS,ARMIDALE,NSW 2351,AUSTRALIA
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0377-8398(95)00066-6
中图分类号
Q91 [古生物学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 070903 ;
摘要
A succession of Sirius Group glacigene sediments which crop out along the western margins of the Beardmore valley between Cherry Icefall and Hewson Glacier, below The Cloudmaker, is designated as the stratotype of the Cloudmaker Formation. This new formation overlies a multiply glaciated pavement (Dominion Erosion Surface) cut into the Precambrian Goldie Formation, and is disconformably overlain by the Meyer Desert Formation (Sirius Group). The Cloudmaker Formation comprises bedded acid massive diamictons, bedded sands and silts, and laminated clays. Assemblages of foraminifera occur throughout the Cloudmaker Formation and indicate that these basal Sirius Group sediments were deposited in brackish glacial marine environments. The general absence of diatoms suggest these marine waters were ice-covered, Similar marine assemblages are also present in basal Sirius Group sediments at Oliver Bluffs, Dominion Range. Recycled marine diatom assemblages in the Sirius Group at the latter locality indicate that the host sediments have an age of < 3.8 Ma (Pliocene). The Cloudmaker Formation is placed in the Pliocene, although a latest Miocene age for the basal sediments cannot be ruled out. Stratigraphic, sedimentologic, and paleontologic evidence suggests that Beardmore valley was occupied by a fjord and tidewater glacier system that extended at least 165 km through the Transantarctic Mountains from the southwestern Ross Sea. The stratigraphy of The Cloudmaker Formation consists of a succession of members separated by disconformities. It is hypothesised that these strata were deposited by a dynamic valley glacier system that underwent a history of glacier advance and grounding alternating with glacier retreat and flotation over a marine water column. A combination of fjord basin sediment filling and sea-level oscillations may also have influenced the pattern of glacier ice advance and retreat within Beardmore Paleofjord. The marine Cloudmaker Formation is overlain by the terrestrial diamicton dominated Meyer Desert Formation. At Oliver Bluffs, the Meyer Desert Formation diamictons are interbedded with fluvial, and lacustrine sediments; successions that contain in situ vascular plant fossils: (principally the Southern Beech Nothofagus), mosses, and beetle remains, A Magellanic-type flora and fauna occupied the coastal margins of the Beardmore Paleofjord. The vertical transition from the basal marine Cloudmaker Formation to terrestrial Meyer Desert Formation provides a sea-level datum that can be used to assess the extent of post-Sirius Group tectonic uplift. Uplift rates at the Cloudmaker section, 90 km inland from the Transantarctic Mountain front or rift shoulder margin in the Queen Alexandra Mountain block are determined to be similar to 429 or similar to 350 m/Myr. This assumes a total uplift of 1331 m for the uppermost marine sediments of the Cloudmaker Formation, and maximum diatom-based ages for the Sirius Group of <3.1 Ma or <3.8 Ma. Gross similarities in stratigraphy and interpreted paleoenvironments are apparent between The Cloudmaker succession (Beardmore Paleofjord) and the upper Miocene-Pliocene successions at the mouth of Taylor Paleofjord, 800 km to the north. Contrasting present day elevational settings for these two widely separated marine successions indicates the post-Sirius rate of tectonic uplift for the Transantarctic Mountains has been significantly greater in the Queen Alexandra block.
引用
收藏
页码:273 / 297
页数:25
相关论文
共 47 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], SCOTTS LAST EXPEDITI
[2]  
[Anonymous], TERRA ANTARTICA
[3]  
[Anonymous], ANTARCT J US
[4]  
[Anonymous], ANTARCTIC GEOSCIENCE
[5]  
[Anonymous], TERRA ANTARCT
[6]  
[Anonymous], ANTARCTIC RES SERIES
[7]  
[Anonymous], 1987, ANTARCT J US
[8]  
ASHWORTH AC, 1994, PLIOCENE HIGH LATITU, P3
[9]  
Barrett P. J., 1972, ANTARCTIC GEOLOGY GE, P365
[10]   GEOCHRONOLOGICAL EVIDENCE SUPPORTING ANTARCTIC DEGLACIATION 3 MILLION YEARS AGO [J].
BARRETT, PJ ;
ADAMS, CJ ;
MCINTOSH, WC ;
SWISHER, CC ;
WILSON, GS .
NATURE, 1992, 359 (6398) :816-818