Emersion generalisee intra-maastrichtienne de la plate-forme de Gavrovo-Tripolitza (Grece); effets sur les populations de foraminiferes Rhapydionininae

2001 ◽  
Vol 172 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philippe Landrein ◽  
Jean-Paul Loreau ◽  
Jean-Jacques Fleury

Abstract The reliability of biostratigraphic correlations in neritic carbonate platforms is often questioned because the benthic fauna on which biozonation is based are particularly sensitive to environmental change. It is crucial to know whether a population change corresponds strictly to a facies change. Conversely, there arise the questions of determining how populations are renewed over time and how new species appear even if facies associations remain unchanged. This is the case with the Gavrovo-Tripolitza zone of Greece, an isolated shallow carbonate platform surrounded by two oceanic domains (Pindos-Olonos Zone and Ionian Zone). The absence or scarcity of faunas generally used in Upper Cretaceous biostratigraphy has led to the use of local biozonation instead, based on faunas endemic to Adriatico-Aegean platforms. The final two biozones based on Rhapydioninidae foraminifera are: - CsB6 (Upper Campanian-Lower Maastrichtian): the "Murciella biozone" is the total range zone of all Rhaphydionininae except for Rhapydionina liburnica; - CsB7 (Upper Maastrichtian): the total range zone of R. Liburnica. The purpose of this paper is to test the biostratigraphic value of the benthic foraminifera by comparing the distribution of the biostratigraphic limits with the distribution of time-surfaces. These time-surfaces are established from sedimentological analysis and sequences stratigraphy. The Upper Cretaceous of the Gavrovo platform is formed by stacked shallowing-upward parasequences which are usually capped by an exposure surface. Most of them were exposed in supratidal environments and dolomitized to a greater or lesser extent. Some underwent continental diagenesis as recorded by karsts, microkarsts and karstic fillings (fig. 5), root traces, alveolar-septal structures, microcodiums, pseudomicrocodiums, pedogenetic pseudomicrokarsts and continental stromatolithic laminations. Although outcrops are great distances apart and located on different structural blocks, they record a major discontinuity within the Maastrichtian. It is characterized by continental exposure, a change in the main type of parasequences, and disruption of the parasequence stacking pattern as evidenced on Fischer plots. In each outcrop, limestones exhibiting continental diagenesis are cut by an erosional surface. This surface is proposed as a local maximum of regression and a transgressive surface. On a peculiar outcrop, the surface marks the inflection point between thinning-upward and thickening-upward parasequence trends on the Fischer plot. In proximal platforms, such a point can be interpreted as corresponding to a local maximum of regression and this surface is also a transgressive surface. The same features occurred in many other outcrops and show that the entire platform was subaerially exposed. Similar episodes of exposure associated with continental diagenesis are reported for Maastrichtian deposits of other Adriatico-Aegean platforms. Continental exposure and associated erosion is currently interpreted as a result of a fall in relative sea level caused either by uplift or by eustatic sea level fall. Successive shallowing up parasequences showing final exposure and continental diagenesis would imply an impossible yo-yo type subsidence. Accordingly, the proposed maximum of regression is thought to be eustatically controlled. Moreover, the maximum of regression caps CsB6 parasequences controlled by allocyclic mechanisms as indicated by similar stacking patterns in different and remote outcrops. This strongly suggests CsB6 sedimentation was eustatically controlled and the relevant maximum of regression is proposed as a time-surface. The distribution of foraminifer populations in the outcrops studied here indicates that the Rhapydionininae of biozone CsB6 do not occur above the maximum of regression. The regressive maximum clearly coincides with the disappearance of foraminifer species whereas the subsequent transgressive episode is characterized by the emergence of just one species. And yet, population renewal is not related to a fundamental change in the platform environment: very shallow water facies association below and above the maximum regression surface are identical. This supports the hypothesis that sea level variations were the cause of faunal extinction and renewal. It is evidenced too that the boundary between the two populations can be used as a time marker. In this case study, the biostratigraphy based on the use of benthic and shallow-water dependent foraminifera is genuinely chronostratigraphic.

2009 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grigor Heba ◽  
Gilbert Prichonnet ◽  
Abderrazak El Albani

Meteoric diagenesis of Upper Cretaceous and Paleocene-Eocene shallow-water carbonates in the Kruja Platform (Albania): geochemical evidenceIn the central part of the Kruja Platform (Albania) located in the Apulian passive margin, geochemical analyses (calcimetry, Sr, REE and isotopic, δ13C and δ18O) coupled with sedimentological and sequence stratigraphic study were carried out on Upper Cretaceous (CsB4, CsB5, CsB6 Biozones) and Paleocene to Middle Eocene shallow-water carbonates that crop out in the Kruje-Dajt massif (L'Escalier section) and Makareshi massif (La Route section). The lower values in Sr contents, the homogeneous δ18O values in both sections and the covariance between δ13C and δ18O values (La Route section) are attributed to diagenesis influence by a meteoric water-buffer system, supported by petrographic observations. Moreover, a new exposure surface during the Late Cretaceous time (between CsB5 and CsB6 Biozones) may be proposed according to the low or negative excursions of Sr values, the negative excursions of isotopic values in both sections and a positive peak of normalized REE values (La Route section). These variations correlate with the geochemical signal reported by the decreasing strontium isotope values of rudist shells in the Island of Brač carbonate platform (Apulia domain) during the late Middle Campanian (77.3 Ma). Also, this continental exposure is consistent with the global sea-level fall reported from the Boreal Realm, North Atlantic, and the southern Tethyan margin. This geochemical evidence is a complementary tool for the sedimentological analysis and suggests a maximum regression (a sea-level fall) at the transition between the CsB5 and CsB6 Biozones. The high values of Sr content in Middle Eocene carbonates (L'Escalier section) reflect changes in depositional environment from restricted to open marine conditions. REE values increase through transgressive systems tract, characterized by small increase of detrital input. However, anomalies of certain values in both sections suggest disturbances linked either to the changes in clay input and to diagenetic modifications. Peaks in dolomite content are linked with regressive episodes or tendencies, and dolomitic facies, as indicated by intertidal-supratidal depositional environments.


GeoArabia ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 49-80
Author(s):  
Afshin Zohdi ◽  
Reza Mousavi-Harami ◽  
Seyed Ali Moallemi ◽  
Asadollah Mahboubi ◽  
Adrian Immenhauser

ABSTRACT We document and discuss the results of detailed fieldwork, facies analysis and the subsequent integration of paleoecological evidence from the Middle Eocene carbonate ramp succession in the southeast Zagros Basin (Jahrum Formation). A combination of a sea-level fall and tectonic and diapiric basement uplift favored the initiation of the Jahrum carbonate platform. The lower portions are affected by pervasive, probably early diagenetic dolomitization, whilst the upper Jahrum consists mainly of limestone. Here, the focus is on the limestone portions of the Jahrum Formation. Based on the abundance, diversity and rapid evolutionary turnover of the alveolinids and nummulitids, the limestone intervals of the Jahrum Formation are interpreted for the upper Middle Eocene (Bartonian). The Jahrum Formation is capped by a major unconformity and overlain by the Lower Oligocene mixed clastic/carbonate Razak Formation. Based on data from field sections, eight facies associations and a series of sub-types have been established, which correspond to inner-, middle-and outer-ramp depositional environments. In their overall context, these data show a southward-dipping inner-ramp-to-basin transect. Towards the Coastal Fars (e.g. Hulur-01 Well) the Jahrum grades laterally into deep-marine Pabdeh foredeep shale units. Based on facies analysis and paleoecological evidence from larger benthic foraminifera, a major transgressive-regressive pattern is recognized in all outcrop sections of the Jahrum. The lowermost stratigraphic units of the formation are here interpreted as a distally steepened ramp. Evidence comes from abundant allochthonous shallow-water facies in the distal, deeper-ramp setting. Shallow-water carbonate clasts were exported towards the basin, a feature that is probably linked to relative sea-level fall control. Furthermore, local to regional basement instabilities by salt diapir-related basement reorganization was arguably of significance. Upsection, evidence is found that the ramp system evolved from a distally steepened to a homoclinal geometry with an overall very gentle slope geometry during the Late Bartonian. The data shown here are significant for those concerned with the Paleogene evolution of the southeast Zagros Basin and provide a well-exposed case example of a Middle Eocene carbonate ramp factory.


1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (11) ◽  
pp. 2292-2304 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen R. Westrop

The Bison Creek and Mistaya formations form the youngest Cambrian sedimentary grand cycle exposed in Banff and Jasper national parks. The shaly half-cycle of the Bison Creek Formation records the displacement of a carbonate bank during a major rise in sea level that can be identified in other parts of North America. Lithofacies of the Bison Creek Formation fall into three recurrent associations that represent sedimentation in shallow, subtidal, storm-dominated shelf settings. The Mistaya Formation records the reestablishment of carbonate bank deposition, probably due to a decrease in the rate of sea-level rise, and includes two facies associations that represent a mosaic of shallow subtidal to supratidal environments. The grand cycle was terminated by a sea-level rise, possibly eustatic in nature, that drowned the carbonate platform. The overlying shales, mudstones, packstones, grainstones, and rudstones of the Survey Peak Formation mark a return to subtidal, storm-dominated shelf conditions.


2010 ◽  
Vol 84 (2) ◽  
pp. 248-266 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin A. Becker ◽  
Robert W. Wellner ◽  
Christopher S. Mallery ◽  
John A. Chamberlain

The Lower Ferron Sandstone Member of the Mancos Shale in southeastern Utah preserves a chondrichthyan assemblage of at least 13 taxa that include:Hybodussp.,Ptychoduscf.P. mammillarisAgassiz, 1843,Ptychodus whippleiMarcou, 1858, cf.Chiloscylliumsp.,Scapanorhynchus raphiodon(Agassiz, 1843),Cretodus crassidens(Dixon, 1850), cf.Leptostyraxsp., cf.Cretalamna appendiculata(Agassiz, 1835),Squalicoraxsp.,Pseudohypolophus mcnultyi(Thurmond, 1971),Protoplatyrhina hopiiWilliamson, Kirkland and Lucas, 1993,Ischyrhiza schneideri(Slaughter and Steiner, 1968), andPtychotrygon triangularis(Reuss, 1844). Although this assemblage is typical of other Turonian chondrichthyan faunas in North America, fossil teeth are preserved in two unique facies associations that consist of arenitic sandstones with mud interclasts and rounded chert, feldspar, and quartz pebbles. the coarser beds within these facies associations are previously interpreted to represent storm events and turbidity flows associated with a sea level lowstand. Chondrichthyan teeth occurring within these coarser beds are indicative of extensive transport and reworking and attest to the durable nature of chondrichthyan teeth for biostratigraphic and paleoecological interpretations. Similar studies of chondrichthyan teeth in shelf marine settings may also provide new insights for facies interpretations related to sequence stratigraphy and regional stratigraphic correlations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 280-287
Author(s):  
Muneer A. Abdalla

Isolated carbonate platforms are common and contain significant hydrocarbon accumulations, particularly in the tectonically complex Sirt Basin in Libya. This study investigates the margin cyclicity of two carbonate stratigraphic sequences developed on an isolated carbonate platform in the NW Sirt Basin using 3-D post-stack seismic volume and wireline log data. The two sequences (sequences 4 and 5) are bounded by unconformity surfaces from the base and top. Seismic attributes show that each sequence displays a cycle of margin backstepping followed by margin advance for several hundred meters. This study concludes that the margin backstepping and advance are mainly influenced by sea-level changes. A rapid sea-level rise caused the backstepping, whereas slow sea-level rise caused the margin advance.


2003 ◽  
Vol 140 (2) ◽  
pp. 173-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
MIKAEL CALNER ◽  
LENNART JEPPSSON

Evidence from sedimentology and conodont biostratigraphy is used to reinterpret the mid-Homerian (Late Wenlock) succession on Gotland, Sweden. A new conodont zonation includes from below: the Ozarkodina bohemica longa Zone (including five subzones), the Kockelella ortus absidata Zone and the Ctenognathodus murchisoni Zone (two taxa are named, Ozarkodina bohemica longa and Pseudooneotodus linguicornis). These new zones are integrated with facies in order to correlate strata and infer the major depositional environments and the controls on deposition during the mid-Homerian Mulde Event. Reef-associated and skeletal carbonate deposition predominated before and after the event, i.e. during the uppermost O. s. sagitta Zone and, again, in the C. murchisoni Zone. These periods are characterized by the expansion of reefs and shoal facies across marls in the topmost Slite Group on eastern Gotland and in the lower parts of the Klinteberg Formation on western Gotland, respectively. The intervening O. b. longa and K. o. absidata zones are initially characterized by rapid facies changes, including siliciclastic deposition, and later stabilisation of a carbonate depositional system. The composition of sediments and depositional rates are closely related to the creation and destruction of accommodation space and reflects a classical case of depositional bias of the carbonate and siliciclastic depositional systems. Based on coastline migration, stratal boundaries, and the stratigraphic position of major reef belts, several facies associations can be fitted into a sequence stratigraphic model for platform evolution. A highstand systems tract (HST) situation prevailed prior to, and during the early part of the event; the upper Slite Group including the lower Fröjel Formation. This HST was characterized by prolific skeletal production and regional reef development except for during the latest stage when carbonate production declined at the onset of the Mulde Event. Platform growth was inhibited during a following regressive systems tract (RST) when regional siliciclastic deposition predominated; the Gannarve Member. The subsequent lowstand resulted in regional emersion and karstification, i.e. a complete termination of the platform. The post-extinction transgressive systems tract (TST) is exclusively composed of non-skeletal carbonates; the Bara Member of the Halla Formation. Re-occurrence of reefs and a prolific skeletal production marks platform recovery during a second HST; the remaining Halla and the lower Klinteberg formations. Integration of high-resolution biostratigraphy and sequence stratigraphy reveals that the major physical control on platform evolution was a 5th order eustatic sea-level change during an early part of the Mulde Event, and that the bulk of the strata accumulated when the platform aggraded and prograded during the highstand systems tracts. Thus, Silurian oceanic events and associated sea-level changes had profound impact on the neritic carbonate system. The Gotland-based middle and late Homerian sea-level curve shows two rapid regressions, both leading to truncation of highstand systems tracts. The first lowstand occurred at the very end of the C. lundgreni Chron, and the second at the end of the Co.? ludensis Chron. The intervening interval was characterized by stillstand or possibly slow transgression.


1999 ◽  
Vol 73 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin J. Head ◽  
Hildegard Westphal

Neritic dinoflagellates from periplatform (slope) carbonates of the Clino borehole, located on the western, leeward margin of the Great Bahama Bank, record environmental fluctuations on the platform top. A lower Pliocene interval (3.6–4.2 Ma) contains platform-top sediments shed onto the lower slope when the platform was open and ramplike. Despite this open topography, abundantPolysphaeridium zoharyiindicate the presence of restricted marine environments on the platform top. Terrestrial palynomorphs are rare throughout this interval and imply a mostly or fully submergent platform top.By late Pliocene times (about 2.1–2.3 Ma) the platform had become flat-topped and steep-sided, with the Clino site located on its upper slope. Samples characteristic of sea-level highstands and lowstands were selected for analysis.Polysphaeridium zoharyiis abundant only in lowstand samples and may have thrived in proximity to terrestrial vegetation. In highstand samplesLingulodinium machaerophorumreplacesP. zoharyi, perhaps in response to less restricted marine environments on the platform top. This change in assemblages, along with apparent variations in cyst influx, reflects a fluctuating history of currents and salinities over the platform top in the late Pliocene. Upper Pliocene lowstand samples contain anomalously high proportions of terrestrial palynomorphs, allowing the identification of two phases of emergence and vegetation of the platform top. Palynology therefore appears to be a sensitive indicator of short-term (4th-order) sea-level change on carbonate platforms.Dinoflagellate concentrations correlate positively with carbonate compaction, and infer that compacted layers have undergone dissolution of their metastable constituents. Dinoflagellate concentrations therefore can be useful in the often difficult task of assessing compaction and dissolution in fine-grained limestones where other indicators are absent.The following dinoflagellate species are formally proposed:Operculodinium bahamenseHead new species,Operculodinium?megagranumHead new species, andSpiniferites rhizophorusHead new species.


Minerals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 747
Author(s):  
Justyna Kowal-Kasprzyk ◽  
Anna Waśkowska ◽  
Jan Golonka ◽  
Michał Krobicki ◽  
Petr Skupien ◽  
...  

The present work focuses on palaeogeographic reconstruction of shallow-water carbonate deposition in the Outer Western Carpathian Tethys. Platform deposits are preserved only as a component of turbidites and olistostromes, and reconstructions of these platforms are based on clastic material redistributed into slopes and deep basins and occurring among the Outer Carpathian nappes. Similar platforms were also present on the Tethys margins. These reconstructions were performed using the global models of plate tectonics. Several ridges covered by carbonate platforms developed in that area during the latest Jurassic–Palaeogene times. Three main shallow-water facies associations—Štramberk, Urgonian, and Lithothamnion–bryozoan—could be distinguished. The Tithonian–lowermost Cretaceous Štramberk facies is related to early, synrift–postrift stage of the development of the Silesian Domain. Facies that are diversified, narrow, shallow-water platforms, rich in corals, sponges, green algae, echinoderms, foraminifera, microencrusters, and microbes are typical of this stage. The Urgonian facies developed mainly on the south margin of the Outer Carpathian basins and is characterised by organodetritic limestones built of bivalves (including rudists), larger benthic foraminifera, crinoids, echinoids, and corals. Since the Paleocene, in all the Western Outer Carpathian sedimentary areas, Lithothamnion–bryozoan facies developed and adapted to unstable conditions. Algae–bryozoan covers originating on the siliciclastic substrate are typical of these facies. This type of deposition was preserved practically until the final stage in the evolution of the Outer Carpathian basins.


2021 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Sebastián Gómez-Neita ◽  
Pedro Augusto Santos da Silva ◽  
Laura Estefania Garzón-Rojas ◽  
Luz Angie Patiño-Ballesteros ◽  
Laura Alexandra Barrantes ◽  
...  

The Tibasosa Formation is the main source of limestones in Boyacá. This unit corresponds to a Valanginian-Albian age according to the fossil content in the Eastern Cordillera Basin, recording the first incursion of the Cretaceous sea in Firavitoba. Outcrop-based facies and stratigraphic analyzes of the ~12 m-thick siliciclastic-carbonate succession of the uppermost Tibasosa Formation indicate tidal and carbonate systems. Ten facies/microfacies are grouped into two facies associations (FAs): FA1, tidal flat deposits consist of laminated sandstones/siltstones and floatstones with a single organism dominance (bivalve shells); and FA2 comprises fossiliferous rudstones, floatstones, packstones, and wackstones, representing a carbonate platform. The petrographic description determined rock textures/genesis and the diagenetic sequence with features of the eodiagenesis, mesodiagenesis, and telodiagenesis suggesting a primary origin of these carbonates. The analysis using cathodoluminescence (CL), energy disperse spectrometry (EDS), and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) allowed identify compositional differences, cementation phases, and morphological features in different processes as micritization, neomorphism, porosity, pyritization, compaction, cementation, fracturing, and weathering. The interpretation of facies and microfacies indicated a deposition mainly in a shallow platform with variation in the hydraulic conditions, warm waters, and episodic events of storms/tsunamis that fragmented the bioclasts. A shallow marine system in the Eastern Cordillera Basin during Cretaceous indicates a large transgressive event that flooded hundreds of kilometers, being a link with the Pacific Ocean before the Andes uplift. The main diagenetic events correspond to micritization, cementation of calcite, and mechanical/chemical compaction as a result of microbial activity, dissolution, precipitation in the vadose/phreatic zone, and burial diagenesis. The diagenetic sequence events reveal the incidence of marine and meteoric process that reduced porosity and attest to the microbial activity in carbonate precipitated. This new interpretation allows the understanding of carbonate platforms in the Eastern Cordillera Basin for future correlations of the Cretaceous sea in Colombia.


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