KGS Home Current Research Home Article Start

Kansas Geological Survey, Current Research in Earth Sciences, Bulletin 241, part 1
Allostratigraphic and Sedimentologic Applications of Trace Fossils to the Study of Incised Estuarine Valleys--page 11 of 13

Prev Page--Allostratigraphic Significance || Next Page--Conclusions


Regional Implications and Applications

The ichnofauna discussed in this study is not unique to the Buildex Quarry section. Comparable ichnofaunas have been recorded from several localities within the Pennsylvanian Midcontinent basins. One of the best-reported examples of a Buildex-type ichnofauna occurs in the Pennsylvanian Whetstone Beds of Indiana (Archer and Maples, 1984). The Whetstone ichnofauna is dominated by surface trails and trackways and includes several ichnotaxa recorded from Buildex, such as Treptichnus, Undichna, and Haplotichnus. Archer and Maples (1984) originally interpreted this association as having developed in a floodplain to lacustrine setting. The subsequent discovery that this facies was deposited under tidal influence (Archer et al., 1988) led Archer (1993) to reinterpret the ichnofauna as having been produced in a transitional fluvio-estuarine environment. Overall features and taxonomic composition of this assemblage suggest the work of a freshwater and terrestrial biota. Therefore, ichnologic and sedimentologic evidence indicate deposition in the innermost, freshwater zone of an estuarine system.

Another ichnofauna comparable to that from the Tonganoxie Sandstone Member at Buildex Quarry consists of two assemblages, the Cincosaurus and Haplotichnus, from the Westphalian Pottsville Formation of Alabama (Rindsberg, 1990). The Cincosaurus assemblage consists of locomotion traces of fishes, xiphosurids, and amphibians. Surface grazing trails and trackways make up the Haplotichnus assemblage. Undichna, Haplotichnus, and Treptichnus also are present in the Pottsville ichnofauna. These deposits were interpreted as having accumulated in brackish water, alluvial-swamp, and tidal-flat settings (Demko in Rindsberg, 1990). The nonmarine nature of the ichnofauna and the absence of definitive marine indicators suggest a terrestrial to freshwater biota.

Kvale and Barnhill (1994) recorded an ichnofauna consisting of Treptichnus, Haplotichnus, small arthropod trackways, and possible fish-fin drag marks in tidal rhythmites from Lower Pennsylvanian strata of the Illinois Basin. These authors suggested that these strata were deposited on estuarine tidal flats under brackish to freshwater conditions. Both the trace fossils and sedimentary facies are similar to those in the Buildex strata documented in this paper.

The examples briefly discussed here yield clear evidence that a distinctive and recurrent trace-fossil assemblage (Buildex-type ichnofaunas) is widespread in Pennsylvanian tidal rhythmites of the Midcontinent. Identification of such ichnofaunas may be useful in the recognition of freshwater inner estuarine facies and may help to delineate fluvioestuarine transitions in incised valley systems.

Prev Page--Allostratigraphic Significance || Next Page--Conclusions

Kansas Geological Survey
Web version March 19, 1998
http://www.kgs.ku.edu/Current/1998/buatois/buatois11.html
email:lbrosius@kgs.ku.edu