ABSTRACT
The Nutzotin Mountains Sequence, a Mesozoic flysch sequence in the
eastern Alaska Range, was studied along the southern border and in the
central portions of the outcrop belt. Three lithologic associations are
recognized in the Bonanza Creek section (southern margin) that together
indicate a coarsening-upward trend, suggestive of a prograding fan system.
These associations are (from bottom to top): 1) debris flow conglomerates
overlain by 500 m of intercalated mudstone and base-missing turbiditic
siltstone, and mass movement features such as slump folds and slump horizons,
2) 195 m of thicker, coarser turbidites intercalated with mudstones; turbidites
are graded but lack one or more of the Bouma C-E divisions, and, 3) 1075
m of massive mudstones alternating with thinly bedded sandstone, overlain
by silty turbidites; mollusc fossil fragments are common in both sandstone
and mudstone beds. Facies associations 1 and 2 are interpreted to represent
deposition on the mid-fan portion of a submarine fan system. Facies association
3 represents either inner fan over-bank and channel margin deposition,
or deposition in the slope environment. Paleocurrent indicators from the
Bonanza Creek section indicate an overall northward-directed current.
The Sheep Creek section (middle of outcrop belt) consists of very thinly
bedded silty turbidites and mudstones. Flaser and lenticular bedding suggests
reworking of the sediment by bottom currents. The rocks are similar to
channel over-bank deposits reported in other turbidite studies. Thick,
massive coarse sandstone beds are also found in the Sheep Creek section;
these may represent channel-fill deposits. The thinly bedded turbidites
and the massive sandstones were most likely deposited in channel and over-bank
environments, either in the inner- or mid-fan portions of the fan system.
Paleocurrent data from this section also demonstrate a northward-directed
current.
Sandstones from the Bonanza Creek and Sheep Creek sections plot on
or slightly above the feldspar-lithic fragment join of the QFL diagram.
Mafic/intermediate volcanic clasts are the most abundant framework grain
variety, and zoned, euhedral plagioclase is the most common feldspar. Grains
of euhedral monocrystalline quartz with resorption cavities are present
in some of the Bonanza Creek suite sandstones. The sandstones lack continentally-derived
detritus. The composition of the sandstones indicates an active volcanic
arc as the main sediment source, and the Wrangellia Terrane as a minor
source.
The composition of the sandstones and the facies associations and paleocurrent
directions observed in the Nutzotin Mountains Sequence are compatible with
or similar to those features of the Dezadeash Group in the Yukon. This
work supports the notion that the two flysch sequences were once a continuous
belt, disrupted by 300-400 km of dextral strike-slip on the Denali Fault.
The Nutzotin Mountains Sequence was most likely deposited in a backarc
or intra-arc basin. Blocks of Triassic(?) limestone (Wrangellian basement)
within the flysch may be evidence of normal, reverse, or strike-slip faulting
contemporaneous with deposition. This may suggest that the depositional
basin was in part extensional.
Kozinski, J., 1985. Sedimentology and tectonic significance of the Nutzotin
Mountains Sequence, Alaska. Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University of
New York at Albany. 132 pp., +xii; 2 folded plates (maps)
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE Oversize
(*) QE 40 Z899 1985 K68 x
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