scholarly journals Biostratigraphy and palaeoenvironmental interpretation of the Dalichai Formation (Lower Cretaceous) in the eastern and central Alborz Mountains (North Iran) based on calcareous nannofossils

2020 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rana SHIRI ◽  
Fatemeh HADAVI ◽  
Fereshteh SAJADI HAZAVEH
1987 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
pp. 1-89
Author(s):  
Erik Thomsen

Calcareous nannofossils are described from Lower Cretaceous strata of four borings in the Central Trough of the Danish North Sea sector, and from three Aptian units on Helgoland and at Sarstedt, northern Germany. The assemblages range in age from Upper Hauterivian to Albian-?Cenomanian. Abundances of calcareous nannofossils varied considerably throughout the investigated sequences. They were rock-forming in several Lower Barremian - Aptian sediments, but rare or lacking in many of the Hauterivian and Albian strata. The Middle Barremian - Lower Aptian assemblages were often dominated by nannoconids. Preservation was generally bad in chalk and good in marl deposits. Some finely laminated black sediments yielded extremely well-preserved assemblages. One hundred and sixteen species were recognized. Eighteen species were selected as biostratigraphically particularly useful and their chronostratigraphic ranges are shown and discussed. The ages of the investigated sequences were determined on the basis of the selected nannofossil events. Some distinct sedimentary units in the North Sea could be correlated with time-equivalent formations in eastern England and northern Germany.


Stratigraphy ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 187-204
Author(s):  
Miroslav Bubik ◽  
Jan Golonka ◽  
Daniela Rehakova ◽  
Petr Skupien ◽  
Lilian Svabenicka ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT: New sedimentological observations in the Lower Cretaceous of the Silesian Unit and integrated biostratigraphy based on calcareous nannofossils, dinoflagellate cysts, calpionellids and foraminifers have brought new insight to the stratigraphy of the Cieszyn section. The oldest exposed strata of themudstone facies of the Cieszyn Limestone Formation are of early Berriasian age, based on calcareous nannofossil evidence. This work proposes that the Jurassic-Cretaceous boundary reported by previous authors was based on reworked microfossils. The detritic facies of the Cieszyn Limestone Formation, typically dominated by detritic-limestone turbidites, appears to be completely missing. Instead, a thick body with combined slump and slide features, of Berriasian–Valanginian age, forms the transition with the overlying lower Valanginian strata of the Hradiste Formation. The slump/slide body represents a local facies, deposited on a fault scarp related to fault-controlled extension of the Proto-Silesian Basin floor.


1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 391-411 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felix M. Gradstein ◽  
Zehui Huang ◽  
Inger L. Kristiansen ◽  
James G. Ogg

Three sequencing methods were used to calculate the most likely biozonation and the periodicity of sedimentary cycles in Lower Cretaceous pelagic strata of the Atlantic and Indian oceans.A database was built of 378 first and last stratigraphic occurrences of calcareous nannofossils, dinocysts, foraminifers, and geomagnetic reversals in highest Jurassic through Lower Cretaceous deep marine strata at 10 Atlantic Ocean and 3 Indian Ocean drilling sites. There are 135 different events in total, about one third of which are unique to either ocean. Using the complete data set, the quantitative stratigraphy methods STRATCOR and RASC calculated closely comparable optimum sequences of average first- and last-occurrence positions. The preferred zonal solution, based on the STRATCOR method, includes 56 events, each of which occurs at three or more sites. The events comprise 6 geomagnetic reversals, 25 nannofossils, 5 planktonic foraminifera, 8 benthic foraminifera, and 12 dinocysts occurrences. Nine assemblage zones have been recognized of Tithonian through Albian age. All but 2 of 18 nannofossil events in the Atlantic Ocean optimum sequence were reported in the same stratigraphic order in a standard Mesozoic nannofossil zonation.Our quantitative examination, using Walsh spectral analysis, of the Lower Cretaceous cyclic sequences at three Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) sites in the Atlantic Ocean generally supports the hypothesis that they are the product of cyclic climatic changes controlled by the Milankovitch orbital cycles. The peaks in the power spectra usually can be related to obliquity and precession cycles; some peaks seem to correspond to the eccentricity cycle. Obliquity seems to be the most important and persistent orbital element responsible for cyclic sedimentation in the Early Cretaceous Atlantic Ocean.The actual pelagic sedimentation rates were calculated for some cores using the results of spectral analysis. The correlation of the actual pelagic sedimentation rate with cyclic patterns and the occurrence of calcareous turbidites indicate that the changes in cycle pattern are the reflection of changes in the oceanographic setting. The changes in oceanographic setting are related to relative-sea-level fluctuations. The intervals dominated by laminated limestone were deposited during higher sea-level periods.


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