Late Jurassic-Late Permian dolomites in central Saudi Arabia: Ca:Mg stoichiometry and Sr-content

1997 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 117-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khaled M. Banat ◽  
Mohammed H. Basyoni ◽  
Rashad H. Zeidan
Sedimentology ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 65 (4) ◽  
pp. 1043-1066 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl Jacquemyn ◽  
Matthew D. Jackson ◽  
Gary J. Hampson ◽  
Cédric M. John ◽  
Dave L. Cantrell ◽  
...  

1994 ◽  
Vol 131 (2) ◽  
pp. 155-168 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Roca ◽  
J. Guimerà ◽  
R. Salas

AbstractThe Desert de les Palmes area, in the southeast Iberian Chain, belongs to a Mesozoic NE–SW high which separated the early Cretaceous basins of the Maestrat and Aliaga-Penyagolosa from the little Orpesa basin. Its structure is characterized by the development of a system of NE–SW to ENE–WSW extensional listric faults detached in a shallow upper crustal level (1.7–2.2 km), mostly affecting the pre-Upper Cretaceous rocks. These faults record two well-differentiated rifting periods: (1) a first late Triassic–early Jurassic rifting period that divided the Desert de les Palmes high in several blocks; (2) a second early Cretaceous rifting period, only developed in the eastern margin of the Desert de les Palmes high, which was related to the opening of the Maestrat, Aliaga-Penyagolosa and Orpesa basins. Based on the comparison of the main features of this Mesozoic structure with an analysis of the structural and subsidence data already known in the neighbouring Mesozoic basins (Maestrat, Aliaga-Penyagolosa and Columbrets), a geodynamic scenario for the crustal evolution of the eastern Iberian Chain is also suggested. This involves four evolutionary stages: (1) Triassic rift (late Permian–Hettangian); (2) early and middle Jurassic postrift (Sinemurian–Oxfordian); (3) late Jurassic and early Cretaceous rift (Kimmeridgian–middle Albian), which includes a short Hauterivian postrift period; and (4) late Cretaceous postrift (late Albian–Maastrichtian).


GeoArabia ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
Régis Chirat ◽  
Denis Vaslet ◽  
Yves-Michel Le Nindre

ABSTRACT Nautiloids are described for the first time from the outcrops of the lower part of the Midhnab Member and the lower part of the Khartam Member of the Khuff Formation in central Saudi Arabia. The nautiloids from the lower Midhnab Member, including Tirolonautilus gr. hoernesi, were found at two localities, and are associated with conical shaped cephalopodes (bactritids), bivalves, brachiopods, foraminifers, algae and ostracods. The nautiloids were recovered from the most marine horizon of the Khuff Formation. The nautiloid fauna confirms the Late Permian (Changhsingian) age assigned to the Midhnab Member based on the foraminiferal assemblage. In the lower part of the Khartam Member, a single specimen of Tirolonautilus feltgeni n. sp. is described here. It occurs in association with other cephalopods (bactritids), bivalves, foraminifers, and ostracods. The specimen confirms the Late Permian age (late Changhsingian) assigned to the Lower Khartam Member based on foraminiferal and ostracod assemblages. This marine fauna is located within the latest Permian maximum flooding event of central Saudi Arabia. The Khuff Formation nautiloids are compared to other fauna in the Peri-Tethys, particularly the southern Alps, where similar forms are described. Their similarity confirms a Late Permian marine exchange between the Arabian platform and the Western Tethyan realm.


GeoArabia ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 77-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Denis Vaslet ◽  
Yves-Michel Le Nindre ◽  
Daniel Vachard ◽  
Jean Broutin ◽  
Sylvie Crasquin-Soleau ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The Permian-Triassic Khuff Formation crops out in central Saudi Arabia along a N-S belt, some 1,200 km in length. It is 171.4 m (562.2 ft) thick in the type section and divided into five members; from oldest to youngest: Ash Shiqqah (formerly Unayzah member of the Khuff Formation), Huqayl, Duhaysan, Midhnab and Khartam. The base of the Khuff Formation is recognised as a regional unconformity (Pre-Khuff Unconformity), and the top of the formation is defined by the conformable contact with the overlying Sudair Shale. The Ash Shiqqah Member is tentatively dated as ?Middle Permian ?Capitanian (?Midian) based on the presence of the fusulinids Monodiexodina kattaensis and Reichelina sp. The Huqayl Member is tentatively dated as ?Late Permian ?Wuchiapingian (?Dzhulfian) based on an assemblage of smaller foraminifers dominated by Pseudomidiella cf. labensis, Earlandia? spp. and Neodiscus aff. qinglongensis. The Duhaysan Member is dated as Late Permian (Wuchiapingian-Changhsingian) based on Hemigordius baoqingensis, Graecodiscus cf. kotlyarae, “Dentalina” hoi, and Colaniella cf. minuta. The sMidhnab Member is dated as Changhsingian (Dorashamian) based on Paradagmarita sp. and “Glomospirella spirillinoides” and the disappearance of the genera Nankinella and Globivalvulina. Within the continental facies in the upper part of the Midhnab Member, incised channels facies yielded the Late Permian Midhnab Flora. The Lower Khartam Member is also dated as latest Permian (Dorashamian) based on the presence of several species of Paradagmarita and “Nodosaria” dzhulfensis in the lowest beds of the member, and the ostracods Paraparchites spp., Knoxiella spp. and Kloedenellitina sp. throughout the Lower Khartam Member. The Upper Khartam Member is assigned to an Early Triassic (‘Scythian’) age based on the occurrence of the characteristic annelid Spirorbis phlyctaena. The Khuff Formation, in central Saudi Arabian outcrops, consists of four regional depositional sequences (DS PKh, DS PKm, DS PKk and DS TrS), each containing a maximum flooding interval (MFI, with the same designation). The oldest sequence DS PKh (named after Permian-Khuff-Huqayl) consists of the Ash Shiqqah and overlying Huqayl members. The basal sequence boundary corresponds to the Pre-Khuff Unconformity (PKU) and represents the onset of the first Permian flooding event recorded in the outcrops of Saudi Arabia. The massive gypsum, gypsiferous claystone, and solution breccias in the Ash Shiqqah Member are correlated to the subsurface Khuff-D Anhydrite. The MFI PKh is positioned in the basal part of the Huqayl Member, and is followed by the regressive evaporitic palaeoenvironments of the Huqayl Member. The DS PKm (named after Permian-Khuff-Midhnab) starts with the subtidal to littoral deposits of the Duhaysan Member, over an erosive surface upon DS PKh; and ends with the regressive supratidal to continental deposits at the upper part of the Midhnab Member. The MFI PKm is located at the base of the Midhnab Member, where limestones yielded an abundant marine fauna including cephalopods and brachiopods. The terminal Permian DS PKk (Permian-Khuff-Khartam) corresponds to the Lower Khartam Member. The basal SB PKk is marked by a return to marine subtidal conditions after the continental break at the end of DS PKm. The MFI PKk is characterised by marine fauna including abundant Permian ostracods, bactritids, and locally cephalopods. The DS TrS (named after the Sudair Shale Formation) starts with the littoral, tidal to intertidal deposits of the Early Triassic Upper Khartam Member of the Khuff Formation, and ends with the closed basin, clayey to evaporitic rocks of the Early Triassic Sudair Shale.


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