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Upper Fifteenmile Group in the Ogilvie Mountains and correlations of early Neoproterozoic strata in the northern Cordiller

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2010

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Whitehorse
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Macdonald, F.A. and C.F. Roots. 2010. Upper Fifteenmile Group in the Ogilvie Mountains and correlations of early Neoproterozoic strata in the northern Cordillera. Yukon Exploration and Geology 2009: 237-252.

Abstract

An ~2-km-thick stratigraphic section measured through three consecutive shale-carbonate sequences documents the previously undescribed upper Fifteenmile Group in the Coal Creek inlier. These descriptions provide the basis for correlation with Proterozoic strata of adjacent inliers in eastern Alaska, as well as in the eastern Ogilvie Mountains. The lowest unit contains interbedded limestone and mudstone with distinctive maroon-weathering layers. Similar strata are present in unit D of the Pinguicula Group exposed in the Hart River inlier. In that area however, the middle sequence containing massive dolostone, that is the most prominent unit of the upper Fifteenmile Group, is missing beneath an angular unconformity. The Callison Lake dolostone is above this surface and is lithologically indistinguishable from the uppermost, stromatolitic carbonate of the upper Fifteenmile Group. Both the middle and upper dolostone units are preceded by black shale, indicating abrupt transgressions. In contrast, the carbonate units contain abundant evidence of shallow water and periodic emergence. We interpret the upper Fifteenmile Group to comprise three shallowing-upward cycles in this area.

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