Abstract

AbstractFluvial strata deposited before the advent of land plants are commonly sheet‐like in geometry, lacking in channel forms. Although some pre‐vegetation strata contrast strongly with fluvial strata from later eras, the characterization of pre‐Devonian fluvial drainage systems remains incomplete. Field studies of the fluvial facies and architecture of the Series Rouge are presented to identify the products and processes of fluvial deposition occurring at high latitudes in the early Cambrian. Three different depositional styles or facies associations are recognized. Facies Association 1 is the most abundant (67%) comprising repetitively stacked sheets of trough cross‐stratified sandstone interpreted to represent the preferential preservation of the deepest parts of low sinuosity, braided river channels, 4 to 6 m deep. Facies Association 2 is also common (30%) and displays more complex facies sequences that include stacked sheets of trough cross‐strata, sets of large‐scale tabular cross‐strata, planar strata and subordinate mudstone. These facies are interpreted to reflect deposition in braided rivers with deeper channels, 6 to 8 m deep. These channels were more sinuous and subject to steady lateral migration which resulted in preservation of both deep and shallow parts of the river. Facies Association 3 is uncommon (3%) comprising interbedded sequences of cross‐stratified sandstone and mudstone interpreted to reflect deposition on a muddy coastal plain in a mixture of braided and meandering channels, 1 to 3 m deep. The fluvial strata of the Series Rouge indicate that these pre‐vegetation drainage systems were predominantly braided fluvial in origin. However, the style of braided fluvial deposition varied according to discharge and valley slope, the braided rivers becoming more migratory with decreasing slope. Meandering channel deposition was locally evident but was restricted to channels of low discharge crossing low gradient muddy coastal plains.

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