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Abstract

Two paleogeographic configurations of the Jurassic of western North America

have been proposed with differing locations of the entrance to the Jurassic Sundance

Seaway, referred to as the southern-entrance and northern-entrance hypotheses. Here,

analyses of facies architecture, sedimentary structures, sandstone provenance and species

richness are used to determine the location of the entrance to the seaway. In southern

Alberta and British Columbia, the Sundance Seaway and the transition to a terrestrial

environment are recorded by the upper Fernie Formation and lower Kootenay Group.

Analyses of this succession offer varying degrees of support for the two proposed

hypotheses. The presence of wave-formed structures supports the southern-entrance

hypothesis, sandstone provenance analysis is consistent with the southern-entrance

hypothesis, and species richness and facies architecture support neither hypothesis. This

evidence illustrates a complex paleogeographic history of the Jurassic in western North

America.

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