Provenance of the Upper Cretaceous–Eocene Deep-Water Sandstones in Sangdanlin, Southern Tibet: Constraints on the Timing of Initial India-Asia Collision

2011 ◽  
Vol 119 (3) ◽  
pp. 293-309 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiangang Wang ◽  
Xiumian Hu ◽  
Luba Jansa ◽  
Zhicheng Huang
2010 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-38
Author(s):  
Damir Bucković ◽  
Maja Martinuš ◽  
Duje Kukoč ◽  
Blanka Tešović ◽  
Ivan Gušić

High-frequency sea-level changes recorded in deep-water carbonates of the Upper Cretaceous Dol Formation (island of Brač, Croatia)The upper part of the Middle Coniacian/Santonian-Middle Campanian deep-water Dol Formation of the island of Brač is composed of countless fine-grained allodapic intercalations deposited in an intraplatform trough. Within the studied section 13 beds can be distinguished, each defined by its lower part built up of dark grey limestone with abundance of branched, horizontally to subhorizontally oriented burrows, and the upper part, in which the light grey to white limestone contains larger burrows, rarely branched, showing no preferential orientation. The lower, dark grey, intensively bioturbated levels are interpreted as intervals formed during high-frequency sea-level highstands, while the upper, light grey-to-white levels are interpreted as intervals formed during the high-frequency sea-level lowstands. Cyclic alternation of these two intervals within the fine-grained allodapic beds is interpreted as the interaction between the amount of carbonate production on the platform margin and the periodicity and intensity of shedding and deposition in the distal part of toe-of-slope environment, which is governed by Milankovitch-band high frequency sea-level changes.


2015 ◽  
Vol 59 ◽  
pp. 268-285 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amandine Prélat ◽  
David M. Hodgson ◽  
Mark Hall ◽  
Christopher A.-L. Jackson ◽  
Carol Baunack ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
A. Yu. Guzhikov ◽  
G. N. Aleksandrova ◽  
E. Yu. Baraboshkin

In this article there are the results of sedimentological, palynological and paleomagnetic studies of upper Cretaceous in Alan-Kyr section (Central Crimea). The nomenclature of rocks was specified, and their deep-water genesis was justified. According to palynologic data, the age of sediments is estimated as late Campanian, in the lower part of the section palynomorphs were not found. In the lower part of the section there was established a reverse polarity magnetozone — probable analogue of C33r magnetic chron, which base should be desirable to use as a primary attribute to determine the lower border of Campanian stage in the section according to Wolfring’s recommendation [Wolfgring et al., 2018]. The received data found a significant divergence microfaunistic dating of the section, conducted before [Bragina et al., 2016].


1992 ◽  
Vol 129 (6) ◽  
pp. 763-769 ◽  
Author(s):  
Otto Renz ◽  
Daniel Bernoulli ◽  
Lukas Hottinger

AbstractMesozoic deep-water sediments occurring on the island of Fuerteventura were deposited near the continent–ocean boundary adjacent to the African margin. During Tertiary times, they were uplifted and intruded by ultramafic, mafic and alkaline plutons and dykes and are now exposed as part of the ‘Basal Complex’ of the island. These sediments reflect more or less continuous hemipelagic and turbiditic deposition during most of Jurassic and Cretaceous times. Two ammonites, described in this paper, document a Valanginian to Hauterivian age for part of the Lower Cretaceous siliciclastic turbidites, and a latest Albian to early Cenomanian age for part of the Upper Cretaceous hemipelagic limestones.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Khazri ◽  
H. Gabtni

Geophysical data combined with geological and hydrogeological data were analyzed to characterize the geometry of Oued El Hajel and Ouled Asker deep water tables (Sidi Bouzid). The obtained results allowed refining the geostructural schema by highlighting the individualization of the NE-SW underground convexity of Ouled Asker and the anticline of axis Es Souda-Hmaeima and Ezaouia on either sides of two hydrogeological thresholds. The geometrical analysis determined the spatial extension of Ouled Asker and Oued El Hajel subbasins. The seismic cartography of semideep and deep reservoirs (Oligo-Miocene; Eocene and upper Cretaceous) associated with the main subbasins contributed to proposing hydrogeological prospect zones for a rationalized groundwater exploitation.


1991 ◽  
Vol 101 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 163-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne F. Gardulski ◽  
Marguerite H. Gowen ◽  
Amy Milsark ◽  
Sandra D. Weiterman ◽  
Sherwood W. Wise ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Roger A. Scrutton

SynopsisFrom direct sampling, the deeper Rockall Trough and Faeroe-Shetland Channel are known to have a Tertiary-Quaternary sedimentary sequence up to 3000 m thick, which is in places, particularly in the north, underlain by early Tertiary basaltic volcanic rocks. The seamounts in the Rockall Trough are of basic volcanics of probable Upper Cretaceous age. The eastern shelf areas have a rifted basement of Precambrian-Devonian (-?Carboniferous) age, overlain by Permian + Mesozoic sedimentary rocks that reach 5000 m in thickness in rift basins. Tertiary sediments thicken rapidly from the shelf into deep water. The western shelf areas have extensive early Tertiary basalts from the Faeroe Islands to the southern part of Rockall Bank. A thin Tertiary—Quaternary cover exists and Precambrian basement lies beneath.The pre-Tertiary geology of the deep water areas and the overall crustal structure have been inferred from geophysical investigations. In the Rockall Trough the crust is of oceanic thickness, about 6 km, but it is probably slightly thicker beneath the Faeroe-Shetland Channel. This fact, coupled with the size of the channel compared with other small ocean basins and the knowledge that fully developed oceanic crust exists just outside the mouth of the Rockall Trough, strongly suggests that at least parts of the deep water areas are floored by oceanic crust. However, seismic reflection and magnetic anomaly profiles do not yield observations characteristic of normal oceanic crust.The age of any oceanic crust in the Rockall Trough and Faeroe-Shetland Channel is equivocal. Between 54° and 59° N a succession of largely sedimentary rocks up to 3000 m in thickness occurs between the Tertiary and the acoustic basement. To the north this succession is masked on seismic profiles by early Tertiary basalts but it is probably present; to the south it is interrupted by a series of acoustically opaque basement ridges. With slow sedimentation rates, this succession could extend back to the late Palaeozoic, but with rapid rates, only to the mid-Upper Cretaceous. An age of mid-Lower to mid-Upper Cretaceous for oceanic crust, equal to that of the ocean crust outside the mouth of the Rockall Trough, is accepted here. Although rapid subsidence and infill in Upper Cretaceous time is not characteristic of major shelf basins around Britain, it may be acceptable for the Rockall Trough and Faeroe-Shetland Channel if they are underlain by oceanic crust rather than continental crust.A likely model for the formation of the Rockall Trough and Faeroe-Shetland Channel is of continental rifting and subsidence from late Palaeozoic or earliest Mesozoic to mid-Cretaceous time, then sea-floor spreading in Albian (c.105My)–Santonian (c.85 My) time, accompanied and immediately followed by rapid subsidence and deposition. The Tertiary was heralded by widespread basaltic igneous activity which briefly arrested subsidence, but was largely a period of subsidence without sedimentation keeping pace.


2000 ◽  
Vol 74 (2) ◽  
pp. 224-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale Tshudy ◽  
Ulf Sorhannus

A new genus and species of clawed lobster, Jagtia kunradensis, is described from the Upper Cretaceous (Upper Maastrichtian) Kunrade Limestone facies of the Maastricht Formation, The Netherlands. Three nephropid lobster genera and at least three species (Oncopareia bredai Bosquet, 1854, sensu Tshudy, 1993, Oncopareia sp. Tshudy, 1993, Hoploparia beyrichi Schlüter, 1862, and Jagtia kunradensis) have now been collected from limestones of the Maastrichtian type area (southeastern Netherlands and northeastern Belgium). Cladistic methods were employed in re-evaluating the phylogenetic relationships of the nephropid lobsters, including Jagtia. These analyses indicate that Jagtia is part of a clade that includes the recent Thymops and Thymopsis. The new genus is the first fossil form to be closely allied with these deep-water genera.


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