JOURNAL ARTICLE

Microfossil biostratigraphy and paleoenvironments of Cretaceous and Pliocene sediments along GreensMill Run, North Carolina, USA.

  • Published In: Stratigraphy, 2024, v. 21, n. 4. P. 323 1 of 3

  • Database: Academic Search Ultimate 2 of 3

  • Authored By: Dixon, Mikayla; Culver, Stephen J.; Mallinson, David J.; Huber, Brian T.; Self-Trail, Jean M.; Spivey, Whittney E.; Harris, W. Burleigh 3 of 3

Abstract

Cretaceous sediments are disconformably overlain by Pliocene sediments along the banks of Greens Mill Run, Greenville, North Carolina, located in the central coastal plain. The Cretaceous sediments, composed of glauconitic sand and clay, have previously been informally considered part of the Maastrichtian Peedee Formation. The Pliocene sediments are assigned to the Yorktown Formation and consist of shelly, muddy sand overlain with a gradational contact by shell-poor, muddy sand. Foraminifera are abundant in the Cretaceous unit and are dominated by the planktic foraminifera Guembelitria cretacea. Low planktic foraminiferal diversity, the absence of single and double-keeled species, the dominance of planktic over benthic foraminifera, and the occurrence of glauconite and phosphorite grains indicates a middle neritic environment. The age of the Cretaceous unit is late Campanian (Zone CC22c), as indicated by the co-occurrence of the calcareous nannofossils Reinhardtites levis and Reinhardtites anthophorus. For this reason, we assign these deposits to the Donoho Creek Formation of the Black Creek Group rather than to the lithologically similar and younger Peedee Formation. Benthic foraminifera dominate the lower part of the Yorktown Formation, are similar to those from the Rushmere Member of the Yorktown Formation in the southern Salisbury Embayment, and indicate deposition in an inner to middle neritic environment. Phosphorite peloids and intraclasts are likely reworked from underlying strata and suggest wave ravinement and deposition during transgression, which is further supported by a fining upward trend. The upper part of the Yorktown Formation exposure, characterized by abundant molds of small bivalves and barren of foraminifera, represents the Morgarts Beach Member. Sedimentological data are consistent with foraminiferal data as far as expected depositional energy. A restricted inner neritic or estuarine environment is indicated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Additional Information

  • Source:Stratigraphy. 2024/12, Vol. 21, Issue 4, p323
  • Document Type:Article
  • Subject Area:Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
  • Publication Date:2024
  • ISSN:1547-139X
  • DOI:10.29041/strat.21.4.03
  • Accession Number:181423632
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