Stratigraphic distribution of shallow-water benthic foraminifera from the Lower Cretaceous Taft formation, Central Iran (Yazd Block), with evidence for the importance of hiatuses

2020 ◽  
Vol 106 (3) ◽  
pp. 102399
Author(s):  
Masoumeh Gheiasvand ◽  
Ali Reza Ahouri ◽  
Seyed Ali Aghanabati ◽  
Morteza Taherpour-Khalil-Abad ◽  
Abbas Ghaderi
2021 ◽  
pp. 3-8
Author(s):  
FELIX SCHLAGINTWEIT

Gheiasvand et al. (2020) use the two larger benthic foraminifera species Simplorbitolina manasi Ciry & Rat and Mesorbitolina parva (Douglass) (Orbitolinidae) as upper Aptian “potential index fossils” for parts of the Taft Formation in Central Iran. This age assignment is accompanied by changes to well-established orbitolinid biozona-tions (e.g. occurrence of Praeorbitolina in the late Aptian) with far-reaching implications. These data were also used in a later “multidisciplinary study” (Gheiasvand et al., 2021) for isotopic correlations (e.g., location of OAE`s), delimitation of palaeobiogeographic faunal provinces and related migration patterns. It is shown herein that the taxa identified as S. manasi and M. parva belong to Iraqia simplex Henson and Palorbitolina lenticularis (Blumenbach) respectively documenting a lower and not an upper Aptian age. This revised age and the different taxononomic inventory do not question all results obtained by Gheiasvand et al. (2020, 2021), but provide a revised basis interpretation.


2013 ◽  
Vol 46 ◽  
pp. 272-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felix Schlagintweit ◽  
Ioan I. Bucur ◽  
Koorosh Rashidi ◽  
Reza Hanifzadeh ◽  
Markus Wilmsen

2021 ◽  
pp. 17-23
Author(s):  
FELIX SCHLAGINTWEIT

Orbitolinidae together with other larger benthic foraminifera are particularly important in Lower Cretaceous shallow-water biostratigraphy provided that they are correctly identified. Especially in the case of the Orbitolininae (with complex embryo), their biostratigraphic range with overlapping ranges corresponds to different lineages displaying ancestor-descendant relationship (e.g., Praeorbitolina-Mesorbitolina). In the last fifty years well established and repeatedly confirmed taxon ranges have been largely extended thereby diluting or negating any biostratigraphic value to individual species. Some biostratigraphic data provided by BouDagher-Fadel et al. (2017) from the Aptian-Albian of Tibet that are contradicting previous results are reviewed herein. This publication mostly refers to the stratigraphic ranges of Praeorbitolina cormyi Schroeder and Pseudochoffatella cuvillieri Deloffre towards the top of the Albian, and that of Palorbitolina lenticularis (Blumenbach) into the late Aptian, as well as some misidentifications.


2021 ◽  
pp. 104752
Author(s):  
Masoumeh Gheiasvand ◽  
Karl B. Föllmi ◽  
Gérard M. Stampfli ◽  
Christian Vérard ◽  
Valeria Luciani ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Felix SCHLAGINTWEIT ◽  
Ioan I. BUCUR ◽  
Koorosh RASHIDI ◽  
Behnam SABERZADEH

2010 ◽  
Vol 90 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivana Carevic ◽  
Darivojka Ljubovic-Obradovic ◽  
Monika Bozinovic ◽  
Velimir Jovanovic

The Upper Barremian-Lower Aptian succession is recorded from a limestone sequence that crops out in the surrounding of Rakova Bara in the Carpatho-Balkanides range in northeastern Serbia. The micropalaeontological and sedimentological studies lead to recognition of the two types of microfacies. The benthic foraminiferal association consists of Vercorsella laurentii, Rumanoloculina robusta, Praechrysalidina infracretaceae, Dictyoconus gr. arabicus, Debarina hahounerensis, Charentia cuvilieri and Pseudocyclammina lituus that confirm the stratigraphical and palaeoenvironmental connection of the microfossil assemblages with the classical Urgonian-type, shallow-water carbonate sedimentation. The association documented for the first time in the study area is considered typical of the Tethyan Realm. The stratigraphical position of the benthic foraminifera species within the Upper Barremian-Lower Aptian interval is discussed. The Urgonian Limestone's of the studied section are comparable with adjacent areas of eastern Serbia and Romanian South Carpathians. .


2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 677-681 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petra Heinz ◽  
Roman A. Marten ◽  
Valiyaparambil N. Linshy ◽  
Timo Haap ◽  
Emmanuelle Geslin ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Watkinson ◽  
Grant Cole ◽  
Rhodri Jerrett

<p>Improved understanding of delta mouth bar morphodynamics, and the resulting stratigraphic architectures, is important for predicting the loci of deposition of different sediment fractions, coastal geomorphic change and heterogeneity in mouth bar reservoirs. Facies and architectural analysis of exceptionally well-exposed shallow water (ca. 5 m depth) mouth bars and associated distributaries, from the Xert Formation (Lower Cretaceous), of the Maestrat Basin (east-central Spain), reveal that they grew via a succession of repeated autogenic cycles. The formation is part of a mixed clastic-carbonate succession deposited during a time of active faulting and incipient salt tectonism, but in an area away from their direct influence and where wave and tidal reworking were minimal.</p><p>An initial mouth bar accretion element forms after avulsion of a distributary into shallow standing water. Turbulent expansion of the fluvial jet and high bed friction results in rapid flow deceleration, and deposition of sediment in an aggradational to expansional bar-form. Vertical bar growth causes flattening and acceleration of the jet. The accelerated flow scours channels on the bar top, which focuses further expansion of the mouth bar at individual loci where the channels break through the front of the mouth bar. Here, new mouth bar accretion elements form, downlapping and onlapping against a readily recognizable surface of mouth bar reorganization. Vertical growth of the new mouth bar accretion elements causes flattening and re-acceleration of the jet, leading to channelization, and initiation of the next generation of mouth bar accretion elements. Thus the mouth bar grows, until bed-friction effects cause backwater deceleration and superelevation of flow in the feeding distributary. Within-channel sedimentation, choking and upstream avulsion of the feeding channel, results in mouth bar abandonment. In this study, mouth bars are formed of at least two to three accretion elements, before abandonment happened. The results of this study contrast with the notion that mouth bars form by simple vertical aggradation and radial expansion. However, the architecture and facies distributions of shallow water mouth bars are a predictable product of intrinsic processes that operate to deposit them.</p>


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