Integrated Stratigraphy and Palaeoenvironmental Reconstruction for the Upper Cretaceous Danish Chalk Based on the Stevns-2 Core

2014 ◽  
pp. 833-836
Author(s):  
Myriam Boussaha ◽  
Nicolas Thibault ◽  
Lars Stemmerik
2012 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 595-615 ◽  
Author(s):  
Birgit Niebuhr ◽  
Nadine Richardt ◽  
Markus Wilmsen

ABSTRACT Niebuhr, B., Richardt, N. and Wilmsen, M. 2012. Facies and integrated stratigraphy of the Upper Turonian (Upper Cretaceous) Grosberg Formation south of Regensburg (Bavaria, southern Germany). Acta Geologica Polonica, 62 (4), 595-615. Warszawa. The Upper Turonian Grosberg Formation of the Regensburg area (Danubian Cretaceous Group, Bavaria, southern Germany) has a mean thickness of 20-25 m and consists of sandy bioclastic calcarenites and calcareous sandstones which are rich in bryozoans, serpulids and bivalves (oysters, rudists, inoceramids). Eight facies types have been recognized that characterize deposition on a southward dipping homoclinal ramp: the inner ramp sub-environment was characterized by high-energy sandwave deposits (sandy bioclastic rud- and grainstones, bioclastic sandstones) with sheltered inter-shoal areas. In mid-ramp settings, bioturbated, glauconitic, calcareous sand- and siltstones as well as bioturbated, bioclastic wacke- and packstones predominate. The carbonate grain association of the Grosberg Formation describes a temperate bryomol facies with indicators of warm-water influences. An inferred surplus of land-derived nutrients resulted in eutrophic conditions and favoured the heterozoan communities of the Grosberg Ramp. Carbon stable isotope geochemistry cannot significantly contribute to the stratigraphic calibration of the Grosberg Formation due to the depleted and trendless bulk-rock δ13 C values, probably resulting from a shallow-water aquafacies with depleted δ13 C DIC values and low δ13 C values of syndepositional and early diagenetic carbonate phases. However, strongly enriched skeletal calcite δ13 C values support a correlation of the Grosberg Formation with the mid-Late Turonian positive Hitch Wood isotope event (Hyphantoceras Event of northern Germany). This interpretation is supported by biostratigraphic data and a range from the Mytiloides striatoconcentricus Zone into the lower My. scupini Zone is indicated by inoceramid bivalves. Both the base and top of the Grosberg Formation are characterized by unconformities. Sequence boundary SB Tu 4 at the base is a major regional erosion surface (erosional truncation of the underlying Kagerhoh Formation in the Regensburg area, fluvial incision at the base of the Seugast Member of the Roding Formation in the Bodenwohr area towards the north and northeast). It is suggested that this unconformity corresponds to a major sea-level drop recognized in many other Cretaceous basins below the Hitch Wood or Hyphantoceras Event. The transgression and highstand of the Grosberg Formation is concomitant to the deposition of the fluvial Seugast Member and the onlap of the marginal-marine “Veldensteiner Sandstein” onto the Frankische Alb. The unconformity at the top of the Grosberg Formation (late Late Turonian SB Tu 5) is indicated by a ferruginous firm-/ hardground and an underlying zone of strongly depleted δ13 C values. The abrupt superposition by deeper marine marls of the lower Hellkofen Formation (uppermost Turonian-Lower Coniacian) may be connected with inversion tectonics at the southwestern margin of the Bohemian Massif.


Island Arc ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 611-626 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shigeyuki Suzuki ◽  
Shizuo Takemura ◽  
Graciano P. Yumul ◽  
Sevillo D. David ◽  
Daniel K. Asiedu

10.1029/ft172 ◽  
1989 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Burleigh Harris ◽  
Vernon J. Hurst ◽  
Paul G. Nystrom ◽  
Lauck W. Ward ◽  
Charles W. Hoffman ◽  
...  

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