scholarly journals Palynological and calcareous nannofossil investigation of the Gosau Group deposits from three boreholes in the Vienna Basin, Austria

2021 ◽  
Vol 82 (3) ◽  
pp. 121-123
Author(s):  
Polina Pavlishina ◽  
Michael Wagreich

Palynological and calcareous nannofossil investigations on samples from the basal part of the Gosau Group succession in three boreholes (Glinzendorf T1, Gänserndorf T3 and Markgraf Neusiedl T1) in the Vienna Basin provide calibrated age assessment of late Coniacian to early Campanian age for this thick non-marine to marginal-marine siliciclastic interval.

2006 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 126
Author(s):  
M. V. Triantaphyllou ◽  
V. Karakitsios ◽  
D. Mantzouka

The calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy, performed at the basal part of the Vigla Shale Member (Frygano section, Ithakl Island), permits its biostratigraphic correlation with the uppermost part of BC21 biozone (Bown et al., 1998) and the upper part of NC7 biozone (Roth, 1978), which chronostratigraphically point to Late Aptian. This result reinforces the hypothesis that the deposition of Vigla Shales is isochronous in the Ionian zone.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaume Dinarès-Turell ◽  
Erik Wolfgring ◽  
Michael Wagreich

<p>The Cretaceous Normal Polarity Superchron (CNPS, chron C34n, Aptian–Santonian, ~83–118 Ma in CK95 GPTS) is followed in the Campanian by two relatively long chrons (chron C33r, 3.925 My duration and then the normal chron C33n, 5.456 My duration) straddling most of the Campanian stage. The analysis of the geomagnetic reversal history has classically determined two nearly linear segments for the late Cretaceous–Cenozoic interval divided at chron C12r. The length of chrons in the younger interval has no systematic trend and henceforth is considered stationary for statistical analysis with a mean chron length of 0.248–0.219 My while the older segment has 0.749 My mean chron length. The stationarity for this latter interval is attained, however, when the two long polarity chrons C33r and C33n adjacent to the CNPS are omitted. Studies in the weakly magnetized southern England chalk succession and marine Bearpaw Shale in the Canadian Rockies from Alberta have argued about the presence of a number of reversals within C33r and C33n (and C34n). However, all these remain ambiguously established and not incorporated in the standard GPTS despite their significance for theories of geodynamo behavior and potentiality for high-resolution stratigraphic correlations that could notably impact, for instance, the chronostratigraphy of dinosaur-bearing terrestrial Upper Cretaceous of the Western Interior of North America. In any case, no polarity subchrons within C33r or C33n have been reported in any deep-sea record or in the landmark pelagic “scaglia” sections from the Gubbio area in the central Italian Apennines, for which a good integrated biostratigraphy and a thorough paleomagnetic record exists.</p><p>Here, we report on a new reverse subchron in the lower part of C33n, informally named the Postalm Fall Subchron (PFS), retrieved in the Postalm section (Gosau Group, Northern Calcareous Alps of Austria). The Postalm section shows a deepening trend from upper Santonian conglomerates and grey shelf marls to pelagic bathyal red marly limestones of Campanian age. The section has previously been studied in the frame of an integrated multi-proxy stratigraphic study that includes high-resolution calcareous plankton biostratigraphy, magnetostratigraphy, stable isotopes, strontium stratigraphy and Fe content. Robust paleomagnetic data has pinpointed the top of C34n that defines the Santonian-Campanian boundary together with key biostratigraphic markers in the lower part of the red unit. The integrated study extents upwards for about 170 m up to calcareous nannofossil zone UC16 in chron C32 in the late Campanian. The cyclic nature of the pelagic sequence has been studied by means of spectral analysis on the limestone/marl couplet thickness data and geochemical proxies that allows identifying the short and long eccentricity cycles and to establish a cyclostratigraphic framework. From 33 new tightly collected samples in this study, 23 display unambiguous reverse polarity and conform the PFS subchron that straddles 3–4 precession cycles (~70 ky duration) within the UC15b calcareous nannofossil biozone. The average sediment accumulation rate at Postalm (~2 cm/ky compared to ~0.6–1 cm/ky at Gubbio) and the high-quality paleomagnetic signal have favored this discovery. The absolute age calibration and related geomagnetic and chronostratigraphic implications would be discussed.</p>


2013 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 209-230m ◽  
Author(s):  
Omar Mohamed ◽  
Michael Wagreich

Abstract Palynological analysis of the Rhenodanubian Flysch Zone section recovered from Well Höflein 6 north of Vienna allows the successful application of non-calcareous dinoflagellate biostratigraphy to the deep-water sediments of the Greifenstein Nappe. All 62 cuttings samples contained organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts (dinocysts) and some of them allow age-assessment. The results corroborated the presence of two thrust slices. The upper thrust unit A comprises a Campanian to Lower Eocene succession including, from old to young, the Röthenbach Subgroup, Perneck Formation, Altlengbach Formation and Greifenstein Formation. The lower thrust unit B contains in addition a pre- Campanian base, probably the Wolfpassing Formation of Early to mid-Cretaceous age.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Klara Maratova ◽  
Dana Zemkova ◽  
Jan Lebl ◽  
Ondrej Soucek ◽  
Stepanka Pruhova ◽  
...  

Stratigraphy ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 87-105
Author(s):  
Emilia R. Belia ◽  
Kevin E. Nick ◽  
Erika Bedoya Agudelo ◽  
David K. Watkins

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