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Johnstone, P D, Mustard, P S, MacEachern, J A (2006) The basal unconformity of the Nanaimo Group, southwestern British Columbia: a Late Cretaceous storm-swept rocky shoreline. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 43 (8) 1165-1181 doi:10.1139/e06-046

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleThe basal unconformity of the Nanaimo Group, southwestern British Columbia: a Late Cretaceous storm-swept rocky shoreline
JournalCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences
AuthorsJohnstone, P DAuthor
Mustard, P SAuthor
MacEachern, J AAuthor
Year2006 (August 1)Volume43
Issue8
PublisherCanadian Science Publishing
DOIdoi:10.1139/e06-046Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID484210Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:484210:5
GUID0
Full ReferenceJohnstone, P D, Mustard, P S, MacEachern, J A (2006) The basal unconformity of the Nanaimo Group, southwestern British Columbia: a Late Cretaceous storm-swept rocky shoreline. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 43 (8) 1165-1181 doi:10.1139/e06-046
Plain TextJohnstone, P D, Mustard, P S, MacEachern, J A (2006) The basal unconformity of the Nanaimo Group, southwestern British Columbia: a Late Cretaceous storm-swept rocky shoreline. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 43 (8) 1165-1181 doi:10.1139/e06-046
In(2006, August) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences Vol. 43 (8) Canadian Science Publishing
Abstract/Notes The Turonian to Santonian Comox Formation forms the basal unit of the Nanaimo Group. In the southern Gulf Islands of British Columbia, the Comox Formation nonconformably overlies Devonian metavolcanic and Jurassic intrusive rocks and is interpreted to reflect a rocky foreshore reworked by waves and ultimately drowned during transgression. The nonconformity displays a relief of metres to tens of metres. Basal deposits vary in thickness, as does the facies character along the several kilometres of paleoshoreline studied. In the study area, three distinct but related environments are expressed, typical of a complex rocky shoreline with headlands and protected coves. Crudely stratified conglomerates represent gravel-dominated fans characterized by debris-flow processes, building out from local coastal cliffs and gullies directly onto the rocky shoreline. Fine-grained basal units represent shoreline environments protected from higher energy shoreline processes, presumably in small embayments. Sandstone facies associations reflect storm-dominated shoreface environments. The unusual thickness and coarseness of these shoreface intervals suggest a combination of increasing accommodation space, proximal and high sediment supply, and high frequency and energy of storm activity. This, in turn, suggests that the majority of the shoreline was exposed to the full effects of large, open-ocean storms. This interpretation differs from most previous models for the lower Nanaimo Group, which suggest that deposition occurred in more sheltered strait or bay environments.


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