Upper Carboniferous Fluvial Sedimentation in the Gulf of St. Lawrence Coal Basin, Mabou Mines, Nova Scotia

Mabou Mines is located on the northwestern coast of Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. Steeply dipping sedimentary strata of the Upper Carboniferous Pictou Group (dated as Late Westphalian C) are exposed on the shoreface. These are faulted slivers of coal measures that can be correlated to strata exte...

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Main Author: Dickie, John R.
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10222/80393
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spelling ftdalhouse:oai:DalSpace.library.dal.ca:10222/80393 2023-05-15T15:46:47+02:00 Upper Carboniferous Fluvial Sedimentation in the Gulf of St. Lawrence Coal Basin, Mabou Mines, Nova Scotia Dickie, John R. 2021-04-19T18:52:04Z http://hdl.handle.net/10222/80393 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/10222/80393 Report 2021 ftdalhouse 2021-12-29T18:20:30Z Mabou Mines is located on the northwestern coast of Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. Steeply dipping sedimentary strata of the Upper Carboniferous Pictou Group (dated as Late Westphalian C) are exposed on the shoreface. These are faulted slivers of coal measures that can be correlated to strata extending far out into the Gulf of St. Lawrence Coal Basin (Hacquebard, in press). The section contains four major lithosomes; two are shale-dominated and two are sandstone-dominated. Beds within these units were classified on the basis of parameters such as lithology, sedimentary structures, fossil content and colour and subsequently described as lithofacies for analysis. Shale lithosomes contain abundant shale, coal and black limestone and have been interpreted as flood-plain deposits. The flood-plain was heavily vegetated and studded with shallow lakes. Sandstone lithosomes are interpreted as fluvial channel sandstones on the basis of their lithology and facies associations. The depositional environment for these strata was a braided river system, not unlike the South Saskatchewan River in Western Canada. Thick vegetative growth on the flood-plain, however, was much greater than in a normal sandy braided river, restricting lateral channel movement. This resulted in an entrenched river that developed vertically-stacked channels through aggradation. As a result, the Carboniferous fluvial system at Mabou Mines developed characteristics usually associated with either braided or meandering systems. Keywords: Pages: 129 Supervisor: Martin Gibling Report Breton Island Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository Breton Island ENVELOPE(141.383,141.383,-66.800,-66.800) Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftdalhouse
language unknown
description Mabou Mines is located on the northwestern coast of Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. Steeply dipping sedimentary strata of the Upper Carboniferous Pictou Group (dated as Late Westphalian C) are exposed on the shoreface. These are faulted slivers of coal measures that can be correlated to strata extending far out into the Gulf of St. Lawrence Coal Basin (Hacquebard, in press). The section contains four major lithosomes; two are shale-dominated and two are sandstone-dominated. Beds within these units were classified on the basis of parameters such as lithology, sedimentary structures, fossil content and colour and subsequently described as lithofacies for analysis. Shale lithosomes contain abundant shale, coal and black limestone and have been interpreted as flood-plain deposits. The flood-plain was heavily vegetated and studded with shallow lakes. Sandstone lithosomes are interpreted as fluvial channel sandstones on the basis of their lithology and facies associations. The depositional environment for these strata was a braided river system, not unlike the South Saskatchewan River in Western Canada. Thick vegetative growth on the flood-plain, however, was much greater than in a normal sandy braided river, restricting lateral channel movement. This resulted in an entrenched river that developed vertically-stacked channels through aggradation. As a result, the Carboniferous fluvial system at Mabou Mines developed characteristics usually associated with either braided or meandering systems. Keywords: Pages: 129 Supervisor: Martin Gibling
format Report
author Dickie, John R.
spellingShingle Dickie, John R.
Upper Carboniferous Fluvial Sedimentation in the Gulf of St. Lawrence Coal Basin, Mabou Mines, Nova Scotia
author_facet Dickie, John R.
author_sort Dickie, John R.
title Upper Carboniferous Fluvial Sedimentation in the Gulf of St. Lawrence Coal Basin, Mabou Mines, Nova Scotia
title_short Upper Carboniferous Fluvial Sedimentation in the Gulf of St. Lawrence Coal Basin, Mabou Mines, Nova Scotia
title_full Upper Carboniferous Fluvial Sedimentation in the Gulf of St. Lawrence Coal Basin, Mabou Mines, Nova Scotia
title_fullStr Upper Carboniferous Fluvial Sedimentation in the Gulf of St. Lawrence Coal Basin, Mabou Mines, Nova Scotia
title_full_unstemmed Upper Carboniferous Fluvial Sedimentation in the Gulf of St. Lawrence Coal Basin, Mabou Mines, Nova Scotia
title_sort upper carboniferous fluvial sedimentation in the gulf of st. lawrence coal basin, mabou mines, nova scotia
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/10222/80393
long_lat ENVELOPE(141.383,141.383,-66.800,-66.800)
geographic Breton Island
Canada
geographic_facet Breton Island
Canada
genre Breton Island
genre_facet Breton Island
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10222/80393
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