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Late devonian carbon isotope stratigraphy and sea level fluctuations, Canning Basin, Western Australia N P. Stephens, ExxonMobil Dawn Y. Sumner, University of California, Davis
ABSTRACT: The Upper Devonian reef complexes of the Canning Basin contain some
of the world's best exposed, continuous stratigraphic sections through the
Frasnian-Famennian boundary. The facies distribution and composition of these
reef complexes record interactions among sea level changes, sediment supply,
ocean chemistry, and paleoecology. Changes in relative sea level produced
spatial shifts in reef platform development and regional changes in sediment
supply that can be correlated across facies boundaries using a combination of
sequence stratigraphy, biostratigraphy, and carbon isotope stratigraphy. During
the lowstand interval below the Frasnian-Famennian boundary, the reef margin
advanced down the reef slope in shallow-water environments, and siliciclastics
locally dominated in the marginal slope environment. Compilation of a broad
late Frasnian to early Famennian sequence stratigraphic framework for the
Canning Basin demonstrates that transgressive intervals correlate to positive
carbon isotopic excursions within the basin. These isotopic shifts also can be
correlated to time-equivalent positive carbon isotopic excursions reported from
transgressive intervals in Europe. Thus, the late Frasnian transgressions in
the Canning Basin were primarily eustatic rather than tectonic in origin, and
positive carbon isotopic signatures of the Kellwasser horizons are globally
correlative. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
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