Drowning of a Lower Jurassic carbonate platform: Jbel Bou Dahar, High Atlas, Morocco

Facies ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dierk P. G. Blomeier ◽  
John J. G. Reijmer
Sedimentology ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 118-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
ÓSCAR MERINO-TOMÉ ◽  
GIOVANNA DELLA PORTA ◽  
JEROEN A. M. KENTER ◽  
KLAAS VERWER ◽  
PAUL MITCH HARRIS ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
pp. 13-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Platon Tchoumatchenco ◽  
Dragoman Rabrenovic ◽  
Barbara Radulovic ◽  
Vladan Radulovic

In the region across the Serbian/Bulgarian state border, there are individualized 5 Jurassic paleogeographic units (from West to East): (1) the Thracian Massif Unit without Jurassic sediments; (2) the Luznica-Koniavo Unit - partially with Liassic in Grsten facies and with deep water Middle Callovian-Kimmeridgian (p. p) sediments of the type "ammonitico rosso", and Upper Kimmeridgian-Tithonian siliciclastics flysch; (3) The Getic Unit subdivided into two subunits - the Western Getic Sub-Uni - without Lower Jurassic sediments and the Eastern Getic Sub-Unit with Lower Jurassic continental and marine sediments, which are followed in both sub-units by carbonate platform limestones (type Stramberk); (4) the Infra (Sub)-Getic Unit - with relatively deep water Liassic and Dogger sediments (the Dogger of type "black shales with Bossitra alpine") and Middle Callovian-Tithonian of type "ammonitico rosso"; (5) the Danubian Unit - with shallow water Liassic, Dogger and Malm (Miroc-Vrska Cuka Zone, deep water Dogger and Malm (Donjomilanovacko-Novokoritska Zone).


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Costantino Zuccari ◽  
Angelo Cipriani ◽  
Massimo Santantonio

<p>A geological mapping project was performed on the 1:10,000 scale in the northern Amerini Mts. (Narni–Amelia Ridge, Central Apennines), coupled with facies analysis and multidisciplinary outcrop characterisation. This project was focused on the Jurassic-Lower Cretaceous succession, in order to reconstruct the Mesozoic palaeogeography and tectono-sedimentary evolution of the study area. This sector of the Apenninic Chain (i.e. Umbria-Marche-Sabina palaeogeographic domain) experienced the Early Jurassic rifting phase, which dismembered the vast Calcare Massiccio carbonate platform. The development of a rugged submarine topography, coupled with drowning of the benthic factories, were the main effects of this normal faulting. The complex submarine physiography, made of structural highs and lows, is highlighted by facies and thickness variations of the Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous deposits. The hangingwall blocks hosted thick (hundreds of metres) pelagic successions, with variable volumes of admixed gravity-flow deposits. These successions onlapped the horst blocks along escarpments, rooted in the rift faults, where the pre-rift Calcare Massiccio was exposed. The tops of footwall blocks (Pelagic Carbonate Platforms or PCPs) were capped by thin (few tens of metres or less), fossil-rich and chert-free, condensed pelagic successions. This rift architecture was evened out at a domain scale in the Early Cretaceous. Successively, Miocene orogenic and Plio-Pleistocene extensional faulting caused uplift and exhumation of the Mesozoic rocks.</p><p>In the study area, geothematic mapping associated with the analysis of basin-margin unconformities and successions revealed a narrow and elongated Jurassic structural high (Mt. Croce di Serra - Mt. Alsicci structural high), surrounded by Jurassic basinal pelagites. The PCP-top condensed succession is not preserved. The chert-rich basinal units rest on the horst-block Calcare Massiccio through unconformity surfaces (palaeoescarpments), as marked by the silicification of the (otherwise chert-free) shallow-water limestone. The onlap successions embed megablocks of Calcare Massiccio (hundreds of metres across), detached from their parent palaeoescarpments. Very thin, condensed deposits form discontinuous veneers on the olistoliths of Calcare Massiccio (epi-olistolith deposits) and are onlapped by younger basin-fill pelagites. The beds surrounding the olistoliths are characteristically bent due to differential compaction, as their (newly acquired) strikes mimic the outline of the stiff objects they were burying.</p><p>Indirect evidence for a Toarcian, post-rift, tectonic pulse can be locally mapped, and is documented by angular unconformities between the Pliensbachian and Toarcian pelagites, as well as by mass-transport deposits found in the Rosso Ammonitico (Toarcian).</p><p>The same goes for millimetric to centimetric neptunian dykes made of Maiolica pelagites cross-cutting the Corniola Fm. (Sinemurian-Pliensbachian). These dykes, coupled with the occurrence of unconformities between Aptian-Albian pelagites (Marne a Fucoidi Fm.) and Lower Jurassic rocks (Calcare Massiccio and Corniola formations), provide evidence for a further Early Cretaceous tectonic phase, recently reported from the southern sectors of Narni-Amelia ridge.</p>


2005 ◽  
Vol 4 (8) ◽  
pp. 653-662
Author(s):  
Jesús E. Caracuel ◽  
Alice Giannetti ◽  
Paolo Monaco

Geologija ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 173-188
Author(s):  
Luka GALE ◽  
Duje KUKOČ ◽  
Boštjan ROŽIČ ◽  
Anja VIDERVOL

The uppermost Ladinian to Lower Jurassic Zatrnik Formation is the lithostratigraphic unit of the Mesozoic deeper marine Bled Basin. The uppermost part of the Zatrnik Formation and the transition into the overlying Ribnica Breccia was logged at the Zajamniki mountain pasture on the Pokljuka mountain plateau in the Julian Alps. The lowermost part the section belongs to the “classical” Zatrnik Formation and is dominated by beige micritic limestone and fine-grained calcarenite. Foraminifers Siphovalvulina, ?Everticyclammina, ?Mesoendothyra and ?Pseudopfenderina are present, indicating Early Jurassic age. The beige limestone is followed by light pink limestone of the uppermost Zatrnik Formation. Slumps are common in this interval, and crinoids are abundant. Alongside some species already present in beds lower in the succession, Meandrovoluta asiagoensis Fugagnoli & Rettori, Trocholina sp., Valvulinidae, small Textulariidae, Lagenida, and small ?Ophthalmidium alsooccur in this interval. Resedimented limestone predominates through the studied part of the Zatrnik Formation, indicating deposition on the slope or at the foot of the slope of the basin. The switch to crinoid-rich facies within the slumped interval of the Zatrnik Formation may reflect accelerated subsidence of the margins of the Julian Carbonate Platform in the Pliensbachian. The Zatrnik Formation is followed by the formation of the Pliensbachian (?) Ribnica Breccia. Impregnations of ferromanganese oxides, violet colour, and an increase in clay content are characteristic. The foraminiferal assemblage consists of Lenticulina, small elongated Lagenida, and epistominids. Individual beds of the Ribnica Breccia were deposited via debris flows. Enrichments in ferromanganese oxides point to slower sedimentation.


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