Abstract
Cretaceous deposits of the Alter do Chao Formation, exposed on the banks of the Amazon river, near the town of Obidos - PA, record a succession of sandstones, conglomerates and mudstones. Seven lithofacies have been recognized which comprise massive conglomerate (Cm), trough cross-bedded sandstone (St), planar cross-bedded sandstone (Sp), climbing cross-laminated sandstone (Sl), massive mudstone (Mm), bioturbated mudstone (Mb) and deformed mudstone (Md). These facies are organized in fining-upward cycles, 1 to 6m thick, and have been grouped into two associations: channel fill and overbank deposits belonging to a fluvial meandering system. The channel-fill deposits include lenticular gravel bars composed of facies Cm and St, sandy bedforms with facies St, Sp and Sl, and lateral accretion bar, consisted of facies St, Sp and Mm, but with distinct migration with regard to that of the sandy bed forms. While paleocurrent measurements from facies St and Sp of sandy bedforms indicate a preferred orientation of paleoflow to SW and a subordinate flow to S, the lateral accretion bar migrates to E/ESE. The following overbank elements have been recognized based on their geometric relationships: muddy floodplain deposits including abandoned channel plug, crevasse splay channel filled with facies St and Sp and natural levee deposits composed of facies St, Sl and Mm. While the muddy channel plug overlies sandstones, the crevasse channel fill is in contact with mudstones of the floodplain and also cuts through fine-grained sandstones and mudstones interpreted as natural levee deposits. Adjacent muddy lenses in the same stratigraphic level on sandstone but with smaller width than that of the abandoned channel are attributed to swales, filled during floods, capping lateral accretion bar.
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