Facies analysis and environmental interpretation of a late Pleistocene coastal lagoon sedimentary sequence containing a Coprinisphaera-bearing terrestrial episode (Kisimayo, southern Somalia)

Facies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 67 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanni Accordi ◽  
Federico Carbone ◽  
Marco Mancini ◽  
Ruggero Matteucci
2015 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 73-75
Author(s):  
Khum N. Paudayal

The fluvio-deltaic deposit of the Thimi Formation constitutes the uppermost part of the sedimentary sequence in the Kathmandu Basin, and is consists of carbonaceous clay, diatomaceous clay, silty-clay, silt, fine to medium grained sand, and thin to medium lignite beds. A 25 m thick fresh surface exposure of this formation at Phaidhoka, Bhaktapur yielded significant number of vertebrate fossils. The vertebrate fossils recovered from a sand bed at 14 m from the bottom of the sequence consist of six teeth. The teeth were identified as Bovid teeth. Along with Bovid molars fragments of limb and pelvic bones were also found belonging to the same individual.Journal of Institute of Science and Technology, 2015, 20(2): 73-75  


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helaine W. Markewich ◽  
Douglas A. Wysocki ◽  
Milan J. Pavich ◽  
Joseph P. Smoot ◽  
Ronald J. Litwin

Author(s):  
A. Munkhjargal ◽  
P. Königshof ◽  
J. A. Waters ◽  
S. K. Carmichael ◽  
S. Gonchigdorj ◽  
...  

AbstractThe Bayankhoshuu Ruins section in southern Mongolia is characterized by strongly thrusted and folded sequences. Overall, three sections ranging from Ordovician to Carboniferous rocks were studied. Facies analysis combined with stratigraphic data provide improved lithostratigraphic descriptions of Palaeozoic successions in the Mushgai region. The overall marine sedimentary sequence is punctuated by volcanic rocks–basaltic lava of Silurian and Middle Devonian age and volcaniclastic bentonite and tuff in the Middle to Late Devonian and Mississippian suggesting an island arc setting. The Minjin Member of the Botuulkhudag Formation (Middle Devonian to Late Devonian) is primarily composed of thick basaltic and subaerial volcanic rocks with minor silicified siltstone and chert inclusions. Thicker successions of limestone occur in the Ordovician/Silurian, Early Devonian, and the Mississippian. The macrofauna is scarce, except distinct limestone horizons where different fossil groups were recognized. Microfossils, such as radiolarians and conodonts, are scarce and generally poorly preserved. However, based on the re-study of collections from earlier publications and new conodont data, a more detailed biostratigraphic record of the Khoyormod, Botuulkhudag, and Arynshand formations of the Bayankhoshuu Ruins section can be developed. For instance, the Arynshand Formation likely ranges from the late Bispathodus ultimus conodont biozone to the Scaliognathus anchoralis–Doliognathus latus conodont biozone. A tectonic breccia occurs in the early Mississippian and is overlain by a red shale of remarkable thickness at the top of this formation which points to subaerial exposure in the early Mississippian (near the Tournaisian/Visean transition). Due to strong tectonic overprint and/or facies, some unconformities/hiatuses occur. Most strata are intensively folded and faulted, ranging from centimeter to meter scale. Overall, deposition likely occurred on either the Mandalovoo or Gurvansayhan Terrane.


1992 ◽  
Vol 29 (12) ◽  
pp. 2571-2582
Author(s):  
Réjean Girard

The Hutte Sauvage Group is an epicontinental siliciclastic sedimentary sequence deposited onto polycyclic gneiss of the Rae Province, between the New-Québec (Labrador trough) and Torngat Lower Proterozoic orogens. Bounded to the west by the George River shear zone, the Hutte Sauvage Group shows an asymmetric facies distribution. From west to east, and from base to top, it is made of talus conglomerate, alluvial fan arkose, and wacke–quartzite assemblage of probable fluvial origin. The talus conglomerate includes fragments from lithodemic units to the west, indicative of a local derivation. Boulders from the De Pas Batholith imply a maximum age of 1.84 Ga for the onset of sedimentation. Structural analysis of the basement faults, along with the sedimentary facies analysis, suggest erosion and sedimentation along a fault scarp affected by normal scissors-like movement coinciding with the George River shear zone. The Hutte Sauvage Group deposition being younger than the regional transcurrent shearing and the arc magmatism episode, the group is therefore considered to be the youngest supracrustal assemblage preserved in the New-Québec and Torngat orogens.


1983 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 16-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Anketell ◽  
S. M. Ghellali

AbstractThe Quaternary deposits of the Gefara Plain are comprised of three major facies – alluvial fan facies of sands and gravels which blankets the base of the Jebel Nafusa escarpment; floodplain facies of fluvial sands and silts with aeolian dunes which underlies most of the Gefara Plain and, aeolian coastal dune facies, predominantly calcarenitic, which is confined to a narrow coastal zone. Well exposed sections in the eastern part of the plain allow sub-division of the floodplain deposits into a number of mappable units defined and bounded by surfaces of stratigraphic discontinuity. The lithologies of these units are described and compared from selected type sections. The relationships between the units, their geometry, and the nature of the surfaces of stratigraphic discontinuity are discussed. It is proposed that, the lithostratigraphic sequence displayed by the Quaternary floodplain deposits of the eastern Gefara region provides a firm basis for correlation, not only with floodplain deposits in other parts of the plain but also with the other major facies developed in the area. In addition, the recognition of significant stratigraphic breaks in the sedimentary sequence combined with facies analysis lays a firm foundation for an interpretation of the geological history of the region.


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