کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
4689730 | 1636087 | 2012 | 14 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

The Squantum ‘Tillite’ (c. 593–570 Ma) consists of thick (up to 215 m) massive and crudely-stratified diamictites conformably interbedded with subaqueously-deposited conglomerates and sandstones within a thick (~ 7 km) Boston Basin fill which is dominated by argillite turbidites. The Squantum Tillite was first interpreted as being glacigenic in origin in 1914 because of the presence of diamictites; argillites were interpreted as glaciolacustrine ‘varves’ with rare ice-rafted debris, and conglomerates as glaciofluvial outwash. More recently these have been shown to be the product of deep marine mass flow processes with no glacial influence, yet because of its age equivalence with the deep marine, glacially-influenced Gaskiers Formation, the Squantum Tillite is still seen by some as supporting evidence for a widespread ‘Snowball Earth’ event at c. 580 Ma. New sedimentological work confirms that conglomerate and sandstone facies are deep marine sediment gravity flows genetically related to massive (homogeneous) and crudely-stratified (heterogeneous) diamictites produced subaqueously by downslope mixing of gravel and cobbles with muddy facies. Rare horizons of ‘ice rafted debris’ in thin-bedded and laminated turbidite facies interbedded with thick debrites show a weak but positive correlation of lamina thickness with grain size, suggesting these facies are non-glacial co-genetic ‘debrite–turbidite’ couplets. A significant volcanic influence on sedimentation is identified from reworked lapilli tuff beds and reworked ash in turbidites. The depositional setting of the Squantum ‘Tillite’ appears to be that of a submarine slope/fan setting in an open marine volcanic arc basin receiving large volumes of poorly-sorted sediment on the mid-latitude active margin of Gondwana. No direct glacial influence is apparent.
Journal: Sedimentary Geology - Volumes 269–270, 15 August 2012, Pages 1–14