Clastic Sedimentology of the Beaufort Formation, Prince Patrick Island, Canadian Arctic Islands: Late Tertiary Sandy Braided River Deposits With Woody Detritus Beds

The Beaufort Formation (probably of Pliocene age) exposed on Prince Patrick Island in the western Canadian Arctic Islands is an unlithified and poorly exposed unit consisting of the following assemblage of facies; (A) clast-supported gravel (channel floor lags, longitudinal bars); (B) cross-bedded s...

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Published in:ARCTIC
Main Author: Devaney, Jonathan R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Arctic Institute of North America 1991
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/64594
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author Devaney, Jonathan R.
author_facet Devaney, Jonathan R.
author_sort Devaney, Jonathan R.
collection Unknown
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container_title ARCTIC
container_volume 44
description The Beaufort Formation (probably of Pliocene age) exposed on Prince Patrick Island in the western Canadian Arctic Islands is an unlithified and poorly exposed unit consisting of the following assemblage of facies; (A) clast-supported gravel (channel floor lags, longitudinal bars); (B) cross-bedded sand (transverse bars, channel floor dunes); (C) rippled sand; (D) horizontally laminated fines - mixed sand, silt and woody detritus; (E) clay-rich mud (overbank suspension deposits); and (F) woody plant detritus, beds of flat-lying logs, sticks, twigs, wood chips, bark, leaves, needles, seeds, and moss (overbank suspension and traction deposits). Minor facies include pebble bands, plane laminated sand, and a thin bouldery basal gravel horizon. The sediments are interpreted to be sandy braided river deposits that are notable for their regionally abundant beds of course woody detritus, a feature uncommon in most ancient braided fluvial deposits. Facies A to C represent bar and channel deposits, with Facies B the most abundant. Facies C to F are relatively minor and are interpreted as low-stage overbank deposits such as abandoned channel fills. Rapid, small-scale lateral facies changes are the norm. Well-defined fining-upward sequences 1.2-2.5 m thick are uncommon. The relative rarity, thinness, and lateral impersistence of overbank facies compared to bar-channel facies suggests that significant amounts of meandering river deposits are not present. The common allochthonous woody fossils were sourced from boreal forests nearby. A thin horizon in one stratigraphic section contains tidal bundles with slack water mud drapes. The Beaufort sediments exposed on Prince Patrick Island appear to be the most proximal portion of a northwest-(offshore-) thickening clastic sheet. The eroded upper surface of the Beaufort Formation, of regional extent on the western arctic coastal plain, is covered with a highly polymict gravel lag that is far coarser and compositionally more diverse than gravel within the Beaufort Formation. Beaufort ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Arctic
Arctic
Climate change
Prince Patrick Island
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Climate change
Prince Patrick Island
geographic Arctic
Prince Patrick Island
geographic_facet Arctic
Prince Patrick Island
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op_source ARCTIC; Vol. 44 No. 3 (1991): September: 177–265; 206-216
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spelling ftunivcalgaryojs:oai:journalhosting.ucalgary.ca:article/64594 2025-06-15T14:14:57+00:00 Clastic Sedimentology of the Beaufort Formation, Prince Patrick Island, Canadian Arctic Islands: Late Tertiary Sandy Braided River Deposits With Woody Detritus Beds Devaney, Jonathan R. 1991-01-01 application/pdf https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/64594 eng eng The Arctic Institute of North America https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/64594/48508 https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/64594 ARCTIC; Vol. 44 No. 3 (1991): September: 177–265; 206-216 1923-1245 0004-0843 Climate change Fossil forests Miocene epoch Palaeobotany Palaeogeography Palynology Pliocene epoch Rivers Sea level Sediment transport Sedimentation Stratigraphy Prince Patrick Island N.W.T info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion research-article 1991 ftunivcalgaryojs 2025-05-27T03:29:43Z The Beaufort Formation (probably of Pliocene age) exposed on Prince Patrick Island in the western Canadian Arctic Islands is an unlithified and poorly exposed unit consisting of the following assemblage of facies; (A) clast-supported gravel (channel floor lags, longitudinal bars); (B) cross-bedded sand (transverse bars, channel floor dunes); (C) rippled sand; (D) horizontally laminated fines - mixed sand, silt and woody detritus; (E) clay-rich mud (overbank suspension deposits); and (F) woody plant detritus, beds of flat-lying logs, sticks, twigs, wood chips, bark, leaves, needles, seeds, and moss (overbank suspension and traction deposits). Minor facies include pebble bands, plane laminated sand, and a thin bouldery basal gravel horizon. The sediments are interpreted to be sandy braided river deposits that are notable for their regionally abundant beds of course woody detritus, a feature uncommon in most ancient braided fluvial deposits. Facies A to C represent bar and channel deposits, with Facies B the most abundant. Facies C to F are relatively minor and are interpreted as low-stage overbank deposits such as abandoned channel fills. Rapid, small-scale lateral facies changes are the norm. Well-defined fining-upward sequences 1.2-2.5 m thick are uncommon. The relative rarity, thinness, and lateral impersistence of overbank facies compared to bar-channel facies suggests that significant amounts of meandering river deposits are not present. The common allochthonous woody fossils were sourced from boreal forests nearby. A thin horizon in one stratigraphic section contains tidal bundles with slack water mud drapes. The Beaufort sediments exposed on Prince Patrick Island appear to be the most proximal portion of a northwest-(offshore-) thickening clastic sheet. The eroded upper surface of the Beaufort Formation, of regional extent on the western arctic coastal plain, is covered with a highly polymict gravel lag that is far coarser and compositionally more diverse than gravel within the Beaufort Formation. Beaufort ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Climate change Prince Patrick Island Unknown Arctic Prince Patrick Island ENVELOPE(-119.507,-119.507,76.751,76.751) ARCTIC 44 3
spellingShingle Climate change
Fossil forests
Miocene epoch
Palaeobotany
Palaeogeography
Palynology
Pliocene epoch
Rivers
Sea level
Sediment transport
Sedimentation
Stratigraphy
Prince Patrick Island
N.W.T
Devaney, Jonathan R.
Clastic Sedimentology of the Beaufort Formation, Prince Patrick Island, Canadian Arctic Islands: Late Tertiary Sandy Braided River Deposits With Woody Detritus Beds
title Clastic Sedimentology of the Beaufort Formation, Prince Patrick Island, Canadian Arctic Islands: Late Tertiary Sandy Braided River Deposits With Woody Detritus Beds
title_full Clastic Sedimentology of the Beaufort Formation, Prince Patrick Island, Canadian Arctic Islands: Late Tertiary Sandy Braided River Deposits With Woody Detritus Beds
title_fullStr Clastic Sedimentology of the Beaufort Formation, Prince Patrick Island, Canadian Arctic Islands: Late Tertiary Sandy Braided River Deposits With Woody Detritus Beds
title_full_unstemmed Clastic Sedimentology of the Beaufort Formation, Prince Patrick Island, Canadian Arctic Islands: Late Tertiary Sandy Braided River Deposits With Woody Detritus Beds
title_short Clastic Sedimentology of the Beaufort Formation, Prince Patrick Island, Canadian Arctic Islands: Late Tertiary Sandy Braided River Deposits With Woody Detritus Beds
title_sort clastic sedimentology of the beaufort formation, prince patrick island, canadian arctic islands: late tertiary sandy braided river deposits with woody detritus beds
topic Climate change
Fossil forests
Miocene epoch
Palaeobotany
Palaeogeography
Palynology
Pliocene epoch
Rivers
Sea level
Sediment transport
Sedimentation
Stratigraphy
Prince Patrick Island
N.W.T
topic_facet Climate change
Fossil forests
Miocene epoch
Palaeobotany
Palaeogeography
Palynology
Pliocene epoch
Rivers
Sea level
Sediment transport
Sedimentation
Stratigraphy
Prince Patrick Island
N.W.T
url https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/64594