scholarly journals Stratigraphic Analysis of Gercus Formation in Dohuk area, Northern Iraq

2020 ◽  
pp. 2293-2302
Author(s):  
Karrar Hassooni Awad ◽  
Hamid Ali Ahmed Alsultan

A surface section of the Gercus Formation (Middle-Late Eocene) was studied in Berafat area, Dohuk Governorate, Northern Iraq. The Gercus Formation consists of a mixed siliciclastic sediments, evaporates and carbonate sequences in the studied region, predominantly in the upper and middle parts. Nevertheless, it usually consists of upward-fining carbonate-rich sandstone cyclothems, marl, conglomerate and siltstone along with a gypsum lens and thin micrite carbonate beds.  The Gercus Formation was deposited in delta and delta front of occasionally depositional environment which is represented by red-brown claystone and reddish-brown mudstone lithofacies. Cross bedded  pebbly sandstone, trough cross-bedded sandstone  and laminated cross-bedded sandstone lithofacies are deposited in braided delta  environment. Marl lithofacies and gypsum lithofacies are deposited in intertidal and supratidal environments. The sea level fluctuation caused the river base level to occasionally rise and fall. In addition, the process changed from erosion to deposition, while the grain size also changed at different environments from gravel to sand and clays. The Gercus succession of northern Iraq was developed during the Middle-Late Eocene in an active margin basin, where the last stage closure of the New-Tethys and its collision with the Eurasian plate took place between the northeastern Arabian plate. It caused major episodes of uplifts and subsidence along with base level variations due to eustatic ups and downs. Within Gercus Formation, several fourth order cycles can be recognized, reflecting generally asymmetrical cycles, as well as the difference between sediment supply and accommodation space.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernardo Jose Franco ◽  
Maria Agustina Celentano ◽  
Desdemona Magdalena Popa

Abstract Objectives/Scope Aptian (Shuaiba-Bab) and Cenomanian (Mishrif-Shilaif) intra-shelf basins were extensively studied with their genesis focused on environmental/climatic disturbances (Vahrenkamp et al., 2015a). Additionally, local tectonic events can also affect the physiography of these basins, especially the Cenomanian intra-shelf basin subjected to NE compressional regime. As this ongoing regime increased at Late-Cretaceous and Miocene, it led to more tectonic-driven basin physiography. This paper investigates the areal extent, interaction, and commonalities between the extensional Aptian intra-shelf basin, compressional Late-Cretaceous intra-shelf basin, Late-Cretaceous-Paleogene foreland basin, and Late Oligocene-Miocene salt basin. Methods, Procedures, Process To understand the genesis, driving forces, and distribution of these basins, we used a combination of several large-scale stratigraphic well correlations and seismic, together with age dating, cores, and extensive well information (ADNOC proprietary internal reports). The methodology used this data for detailed mapping of 11 relevant time stratigraphic intervals, placing the mapped architecture in the context of the global eustatic sea level and major geodynamic events of the Arabian Plate. Results, Observations, Conclusions Aptian basin took place as a consequence of environmental/climatic disturbances (Vahrenkamp et al., 2015a). However, environmental factors alone cannot explain isolated carbonate build-ups on salt-related structures at the intra-shelf basin, offshore Abu Dhabi. Subsequently, the emplacement of thrust sheets of Tethyan rocks from NE, and following ophiolite obduction (Searle et al., 1990; Searle, 2007; Searle and Ali, 2009; Searle et al., 2014), established a compressional regime in the Albian?-Cenomanian. This induced tectonic features such as: loading-erosion on eastern Abu Dhabi, isolated carbonate build-ups, and reactivation of a N-S deep-rooted fault (possibly a continuation of Precambrian Amad basement ridge from KSA). This N-S feature was probably the main factor contributing the basin axis change from E-W Aptian trend to N-S position at Cenomanian. Further compression continued into the Coniacian-Santonian, leading to a nascent foreland basin. This compression established a foredeep in eastern Abu Dhabi, separated by a bulge from the northern extension of the eastern Rub’ Al-Khali basin (Ghurab syncline) (Patton and O'Connor, 1988). Numerous paleostructures were developed onshore Abu Dhabi, together with several small patch-reefs on offshore salt growing structures. Campanian exhibits maximum structuration associated to eastern transpression related to Masirah ophiolite obduction during India drift (Johnson et al., 2005, Filbrandt et al., 2006; Gaina et al., 2015). This caused more differentiation of the foredeep, onshore synclines, and northern paleostructures, which continued to cease through Maastrichtian. From Paleocene to Late-Eocene, paleostructure growth intensity continued decreasing and foreland basin hydrological restriction began with the Neotethys closure. Through Oligocene until Burdigalian this situation continued, where the Neotethys closed with the Zagros Orogeny (Sharland et al., 2001), causing a new environmental/climatic disturbances period. These disturbances prevented the continued progradation of the carbonate factory into the foredeep, leading to conspicuous platform-basin differentiation. Additionally, the Zagros orogeny tilted the plate northeastward, dismantling the paleostructures generated at Late-Cenomanian. Finally, during an arid climate in the Burdigalian to Middle-Miocene, the confined Neogene sea filled the foredeep accommodation space with massive evaporites. Novel/Additive Information Little has been published about the outline and architecture of these basins in Abu Dhabi and the detailed circumstances that led to their genesis using subsurface information.


Author(s):  
Ivan Martini ◽  
Elisa Ambrosetti ◽  
Andrea Brogi ◽  
Mauro Aldinucci ◽  
Frank Zwaan ◽  
...  

AbstractRift-basins are the shallow effects of lithosphere-scale extensional processes often producing polyphase faulting. Their sedimentary evolution depends on the mutual interplay between tectonics, climate, and eustasy. Estimating the role of each factor is generally a challenging issue. This paper is focused on the tectono-sedimentary evolution of the Neogene Siena-Radicofani Basin, a polyphase structural depression located in the inner Northern Apennines. Since Miocene, this basin developed after prolonged extensional tectonics, first as a bowl-shaped structural depression, later reorganized into a half-graben structure due to the activation of high-angle normal faults in the Zanclean. At that time the basin contained coeval continental and marine settings controlled by the normal faulting that caused the development of local coarse-grained depositional systems. These were investigated to: (i) discriminate between the influences of tectonics and climate on sedimentation patterns, and (ii) provide detailed time constraints on fault activity. The analysed successions were deposited in an interval between 5.08 and 4.52 Ma, when a climate-induced highstand phase occurred throughout the Mediterranean. However, evidence of local relative sea-level drops is registered in the sedimentary record, often associated with increased accommodation space and sediment supply. Such base-level fluctuations are not connected to climate changes, suggesting that the faults generally control sedimentation along the basin margins.


Author(s):  
J. Knight

Abstract Slope and lowland sediment systems throughout southern Africa are dominated by the presence of colluvium with interbedded palaeosols and hardground duricrusts. These sediments correspond to phases of land surface instability and stability, respectively, during the late Quaternary. This study examines the stratigraphy and environmental interpretation of slope sediment records from specific sites in southern Africa for the period of marine isotope stages (MIS) 6 to 1 (~191 ka to present), informed by theoretical ideas of the dynamics of slope systems including sediment supply and accommodation space. Based on this analysis, phases of land surface instability and stability for the period MIS 6 to 1 are identified. The spatial and temporal patterns of land surface conditions are not a simple reflection of climate forcing, but rather reflect the workings of slope systems in response to climate in addition to the role of geologic, edaphic and ecological factors that operate within catchment-scale sediment systems. Considering these systems dynamics can yield a better understanding of the usefulness and limitations of slope sediment stratigraphies.


GeoArabia ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 445-504 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.Ziegler Martin

ABSTRACT A series of 19 paleofacies maps have been generated for given time intervals between the Late Permian and Holocene to reconstruct the depositional history of the Arabian Plate. The succession of changing lithological sequences is controlled by the interplay of eustacy and sediment supply with regional and local tectonic influences. The Mesozoic paleofacies history of the Plate is, in its central and eastern portion east of Riyadh, strongly influenced by an older N-trending, horst and graben system that reflects the grain of the Precambrian Amar Collision and successively younger structural deformations. The late Paleozoic Hercynian orogenic event caused block faulting and relative uplift and resulted in a marked paleorelief. This jointed structural pattern dominated the entire Mesozoic and, to some extent, the Cenozoic facies distribution. The relationship between producing fields and the paleofacies maps illustrates the various petroleum systems of particular times and regions.


Geology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (10) ◽  
pp. 943-947 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.R. Reid ◽  
J.R. Delph ◽  
M.A. Cosca ◽  
W.K. Schleiffarth ◽  
G. Gençalioğlu Kuşcu

Abstract A co-investigation of mantle melting conditions and seismic structure revealed an evolutionary record of mantle dynamics accompanying the transition from subduction to collision along the Africa-Eurasia margin and the >1 km uplift of the Anatolian Plateau. New 40Ar/39Ar dates of volcanic rocks from the Eastern Taurides (southeast Turkey) considerably expand the known spatial extent of Miocene-aged mafic volcanism following a magmatic lull over much of Anatolia that ended at ca. 20 Ma. Mantle equilibration depths for these chemically diverse basalts are interpreted to indicate that early to middle Miocene lithospheric thickness in the region varied from ∼50 km or less near the Bitlis suture zone to ∼80 km near the Inner Tauride suture zone. This southward-tapering lithospheric base could be a vestige of the former interface between the subducted (and now detached) portion of the Arabian plate and the overriding Eurasian plate, and/or a reflection of mantle weakening associated with greater mantle hydration trenchward prior to collision. Asthenospheric upwelling driven by slab tearing and foundering along this former interface, possibly accompanied by convective removal of the lithosphere, could have led to renewed volcanic activity after 20 Ma. Melt equilibration depths for late Miocene and Pliocene basalts together with seismic imaging of the present lithosphere indicate that relatively invariant lithospheric thicknesses of 60–70 km have persisted since the middle Miocene. Thus, no evidence is found for large-scale (tens of kilometers) Miocene delamination of the lower lithosphere from the overriding plate, which has been proposed elsewhere to account for late Miocene and younger uplift of Anatolia.


2006 ◽  
Vol 177 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ludovic Mocochain ◽  
Georges Clauzon ◽  
Jean-Yves Bigot

Abstract The Messinian salinity crisis is typically recorded by evaporites in the abyssal plains of the Mediterranean Sea and by canyons incised into the Mediterranean margins and their hinterlands. However, the impacts of crisis on geomorphology and surface dynamics lasted, until canyons were filled by sediments in the Pliocene (fig. 2). In the mid-Rhône valley, the Ardeche Cretaceous carbonate platform is incised over 600 m by the Rhône Messinian canyon. The canyon thalweg is located – 236 m bsl (below sea level) in the borehole of Pierrelatte [Demarcq, 1960; fig. 1]. During the Pliocene, this canyon was flooded as a ria and infilled by a Gilbert type fan delta [Clauzon and Rubino, 1992; Clauzon et al., 1995]. The whole Messinian-Pliocene third order cycle [Haq et al., 1987] generated four benchmark levels. The first two are [Clauzon, 1996]: (i) The pre-evaporitic abandonment surface which is mapped around the belvedere of Saint-Restitut (fig. 1). This surface is synchronous [Clauzon, 1996] of the crisis onset (5.95 Ma) [Gautier et al., 1994; Krigjsman et al., 1999] and, consequently, is an isochronous benchmark. (ii) The Messinian erosional surface is also an isochronous benchmark due to the fast flooding [Blanc, 2002] of the Rhône canyon, becoming a ria at 5.32 Ma [Hilgen and Langereis, 1988]. These surfaces are the result of endoreic Mediterranean sea level fall more than a thousand meters below the Atlantic Ocean. A huge accommodation space (up to more than 1000 m) was created as sea-level rose up to 80 m above its present-day level (asl) during the Pliocene highstand of cycle TB 3.4 (from 5.32 to 3.8 Ma). During the Lower Pliocene this accommodation space was filled by a Gilbert fan delta. This history yields two other benchmark levels: (i) the marine/non marine Pliocene transition which is an heterochronous surface produced by the Gilbert delta progradation. This surface recorded the Pliocene highstand sea level; (ii) the Pliocene abandonment surface at the top of the Gilbert delta continental wedge. Close to the Rhône-Ardeche confluence, the present day elevations of the four reference levels are (evolution of base-level synthesized in fig. 4): (1) 312 m asl, (2) 236 m bsl, (3) 130 m asl, (4) 190 m asl. The Ardèche carbonate platform underwent karstification both surficial and at depth. The endokarst is characterized by numerous cavities organised in networks. Saint-Marcel Cave is one of those networks providing the most complete record (fig. 5). It opens out on the northern side of the Ardeche canyon at an altitude of 100 m. It is made up by three superposed levels extending over 45 km in length. The lower level (1) is flooded and functionnal. It extends beneath the Ardeche thalweg down to the depth of 10 m bsl reached by divers. The observations collected in the galleries lead us to the conclusion that the karst originated in the vadose area [Brunet, 2000]. The coeval base-level was necessarily below those galleries. The two other levels (middle (2) and upper (3)) are today abandoned and perched. The middle level is about 115 m asl and the upper one is about 185 m asl. They are horizontal and have morphologies specific to the phreatic and temporary phreatic zone of the karst (fig. 6). In literature, the terracing of the Saint-Marcel Cave had been systematically interpreted as the result of the lowering by steps of the Ardeche base-level [Guérin, 1973; Blanc, 1995; Gombert, 1988; Debard, 1997]. In this interpretation, each deepening phase of the base level induces the genesis of the gravitary shaft and the abandonment of the previous horizontal level. The next stillstand of base level leads to the elaboration of a new horizontal level (fig. 7). This explanation is valid for most of Quaternary karsts, that are related to glacioeustatic falls of sea-level. However our study on the Saint-Marcel Cave contests this interpretation because all the shafts show an upward digging dynamism and no hint of vadose sections. The same “per ascensum” hydrodynamism was prevailing during the development of the whole network (figs. 8 and 9). We interpret the development of the Ardeche endokarst as related to the eustatic Messinian-Pliocene cycle TB 3.4/3.5 recorded by the Rhône river. The diving investigations in the flooded part of the Saint-Marcel Cave and also in the vauclusian springs of Bourg-Saint-Andeol reached - 154 m bsl. Those depths are compatible only with the incision of the Messinian Rhône canyon at the same altitude (−236 m bsl). The Saint-Marcel lower level would have develop at that time. The ascending shaping of levels 2 and 3 is thus likely to have formed during the ensuing sea-level rise and highstand during the Pliocene, in mainly two steps: (i) the ria stage controlled by the Mediterranean sea level rise and stillstand; (ii) the rhodanian Gilbert delta progradation, that controlled the genesis of the upper level (fig. 10).


2006 ◽  
Vol 43 (8) ◽  
pp. 1165-1181 ◽  
Author(s):  
P D Johnstone ◽  
P S Mustard ◽  
J A MacEachern

The Turonian to Santonian Comox Formation forms the basal unit of the Nanaimo Group. In the southern Gulf Islands of British Columbia, the Comox Formation nonconformably overlies Devonian metavolcanic and Jurassic intrusive rocks and is interpreted to reflect a rocky foreshore reworked by waves and ultimately drowned during transgression. The nonconformity displays a relief of metres to tens of metres. Basal deposits vary in thickness, as does the facies character along the several kilometres of paleoshoreline studied. In the study area, three distinct but related environments are expressed, typical of a complex rocky shoreline with headlands and protected coves. Crudely stratified conglomerates represent gravel-dominated fans characterized by debris-flow processes, building out from local coastal cliffs and gullies directly onto the rocky shoreline. Fine-grained basal units represent shoreline environments protected from higher energy shoreline processes, presumably in small embayments. Sandstone facies associations reflect storm-dominated shoreface environments. The unusual thickness and coarseness of these shoreface intervals suggest a combination of increasing accommodation space, proximal and high sediment supply, and high frequency and energy of storm activity. This, in turn, suggests that the majority of the shoreline was exposed to the full effects of large, open-ocean storms. This interpretation differs from most previous models for the lower Nanaimo Group, which suggest that deposition occurred in more sheltered strait or bay environments.


1970 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Naresh Kazi Tamrakar ◽  
Pramila Shrestha ◽  
Surendra Maharjan

Lake marginal sedimentation prevailed around the Paleo-Kathmandu Lake. Owing to the difference in local basin conditions; tectonics, source rock types and river systems therein, the lake marginal environments and sedimentary facies associations differ around the Paleo-Kathmandu Lake. In this study, the basin-fill sediments of southwestern margin of the Kathmandu Basin were studied for the sediments recorded in vertical sequences at various localities and facies analysis was made. Mainly eight facies were recognised. They were matrix-supported massive gravel (Gmm), matrix-supported graded gravel (Gmg), gravelly fine or mud (GF), massive silt (Fsm), massive mud (Fm), ripple-laminated silt or laminated silt/mud/clay (Fl), carbonaceous clay (C), and incipient soil with roots (Fr). Four facies associations that were identified were proximal fan-delta facies association (FA1), mid fan-delta facies associaiton (FA2), distal fan-delta facies association (FA3), and gravelly sinuous river facies association (FA4). Remarkably, these facies associations do not contain any sandy facies and foreset bedding of Gilbert-type. The fan-delta region was characterised by flood-dominated flows and vertical accretion of fines in the flood basins, and vegetated swamps rich in organic sediments. The distribution of facies associations suggests extensive lake transgression followed by rapid lake regression. The recent river system then incised the valley against local upliftment due to faulting or lowering of base level of the main river in the Kathmandu Basin probably related to draining out of the lake water. doi: Bulletin of the Department of Geology, Vol. 12, 2009, pp. 1-16


2012 ◽  
Vol 616-618 ◽  
pp. 48-51
Author(s):  
Huan Jun Jia

By applying the data of drilling core, well logging and 3D seismics and studying the sequence framework, sedimentary microfacies and shallow gas distribution law, it shows that the Heidimiao Reservoir is vertically divided into a long-term, 4 intermediate-term and 25 short-term base-level cycles. Heidimiao Reservoir is of the gentle river controlled sedimentary system of delta front The main microfacies are underwater distributary channels, mouth bars and distal bars. Shallow gas is vertically distributed in the reservoir sandbody at the period of intermidiate hemicycles of late decrease or early rise in long-term hemicycles of the early fall. It is reasonable match of distribution discipline of single sandbody, gas source faults and structure that is the dominated factor for shallow gas plane accumulation. Based on the study above, 90 gas traps are depicted by applying the gas-water interpretation templates.


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