Abstract

The facies and sequence stratigraphic analyses of the Padeha Formation (Early–Middle Devonian) in the East-Central Iran are based on two measured stratigraphic sections in the Ozbak-Kuh (type section) and Deranjal (Dahaneh-Kalot section) Mountains in the northern Tabas Block, with a thickness of 492 and 320m respectively. The field observations and laboratory studies were used to identify sixteen lithofacies and four architectural elements. The facies associations were classified into five categories including sandstone (St, Sp, Sr, Sh, Sl), fine grained (siltstone–claystone) or mud rock (Fl), interbedded sandstone–mud rock (Sr(Fl), Sr/Fl, Fl(Sr)), dolomite (Dl and Ds), and evaporate (El, Efl, Efm, Edl). Structural (wave and interference ripples, planar cross-bedding and herringbone, flaser-wavy and lenticular beddings, tepee and stromatolite structures, entrolothic foldings, shrinkage and syneresis cracks, rain drop imprints, and salt casts) and textural (mature–supermature quartzarenite) features, as well as predominant bimodal pattern of paleocurrents in most lithofacies, show that sediments of the Padeha Formation have been deposited in a tidal flat environment. The sandstone, interbedded sandstone–mud rock, and dolomite facies (SB and LA architectural elements) are related to subtidal and intertidal settings, and fine-grained sediments and evaporate facies (consisting of FF and E architectural elements) were deposited in the supratidal and sabkha settings. Detail sequence stratigraphic study led to identification of two 3rd order complete depositional sequences (DS2 and DS3) with SB1 sequence boundaries and two incomplete sequences (DS1 and DS4). Supratidal and sabkha facies were formed during the fall of relative sea level and are related to the lowstand systems tract (LST). The intertidal facies were formed at a rise of relative sea level and are interpreted as transgressive (TST) and highstand (HST) systems tracts.

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