Title of article :
Sequence stratigraphic controls on synsedimentary cementation and preservation of dinosaur tracks: Example from the lower Cretaceous, (Upper Albian) Dakota Formation, Southeastern Nebraska, U.S.A.
Author/Authors :
Phillips Jr.، نويسنده , , Preston Lee and Ludvigson، نويسنده , , Greg A. and Matthew Joeckel، نويسنده , , R. and Gonzلlez، نويسنده , , Luis A. and Brenner، نويسنده , , Robert L. and Witzke، نويسنده , , Brian J.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
A thin cemented sandstone bed in the Upper Albian Dakota Formation of southeastern Nebraska contains the first dinosaur tracks to be described from the state. Of equal importance to the tracks are stable-isotope (C, O) analyses of cements in the track bed, especially in the context of data derived from generally correlative strata (sandstones and sphaerosiderite-bearing paleosols) in the region. These data provide the framework for interpretations of paleoenvironmental conditions, as well as a novel approach to understanding mechanisms of terrestrial vertebrate track preservation.
inus-cement-porosity (> 47%) and low grain-to-grain contacts (∼2.5) in the track bed indicate early (pre-compaction) lithification. Although phreatic cements dominate, the history of cementation within this stratigraphic interval is complex. Cathodoluminescence petrography reveals two distinct calcite zones in the track-bearing horizon and four cement zones in stratigraphically equivalent strata from a nearby section. The earliest calcite cements from both localities are likely coeval because they exhibit identical positive covariant trends (δ18O values of − 9.89 to − 6.32‰ and δ13C values of − 28.01 to − 19.33‰ VPDB) and record mixing of brackish and meteoric groundwaters. All other calcite cements define meteoric calcite lines with δ18O values clustering around − 9.42‰ and − 8.21‰ VPDB from the track-bearing horizon, and − 7.74‰, − 5.81‰, and − 3.95‰ VPDB from the neighboring section. Distinct meteoric sphaerosiderite lines from roughly correlative paleosols serve as a proxy for locally recharged groundwaters. Back-calculated paleogroundwater δ18O estimates from paleosol sphaerosiderites range from − 7.4 to − 4.2‰ SMOW; whereas, meteoric calcite lines from the track horizon are generally more depleted.
ences in cement δ18O values record changes in paleogroundwater recharge areas over time. Early calcite cements indicate mixing of fresh and brackish groundwaters during the syndepositional lithification of the track horizon. Later calcite cements, however, indicate recharge from a larger catchment basin that extended far inland. Therefore, the cements likely record a rise and subsequent fall in relative sea level. We conclude that scrutiny of the cement isotope geochemistry of genetically significant surfaces, especially track beds, can provide new data for interpreting sea level change.
Keywords :
isotopes , Cretaceous , diagenesis , Carbonate cements , Dinosaur tracks
Journal title :
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Journal title :
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology