Abstract

Finds of Upper Cretaceous marine macrofossils from Pautut have been reported since 1874. Subsequent investigations have led to contrasting views concerning the stratigraphic position of the fossils, the general depositional environment, and the amount of marine influence. During a brief visit to Pautut in the summer of 1989, a section of the exposed sediments was described. The sediments can be divided into 4 facies associations reflecting deposition on a prograding delta front, in distributary channels, on a subaerial to limnic delta plain and on an abandoned delta lobe during a marine transgression. The sedimentological model predicts that marine fossils, if present, should occur in the delta front association. The sediments were thoroughly searched for marine macrofossils, which were found in the lower part of the prominent coarsening-upward delta front sequences. The number of fossils is generally low. Bivalves and echinoids constitute the dominant groups of fossils and seem to have been well adapted to a life in muddy marine bays, subject to fluctuations in salinity and rate of deposition and with much suspended sediment. The fossils indicate that the beds at Pautut were deposited during latest Santonian to earliest Campa­nian times. Sediment accumulation rates were high. The stratigraphy within the Pautfit area is discussed and all the Cretaceous sediments are referred to the Atane Formation.

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