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Fossils, sediments, tectonics
Authors:Margret Steinthorsdottir  Scott Lidgard  Eckart Håkansson
Institution:1. Field Museum of Natural History, 1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL, 60605, USA
3. Department of Geology, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland
2. Geological Institute, University of Copenhagen, ?ster Voldgade 10, 1350, Copenhagen K, Denmark
Abstract:Tectonic displacement and small-scale tsunamis apparently affected deposition of the Kolymbia limestone, Cape Vagia, Rhodes, Eastern Mediterranean. Coarse beds interrupt the sequential build-up of this Pliocene–Pleistocene bryomol limestone. Celleporid bryozoans, bivalves, and brachiopods dominate these beds. The palaeoecology of the thicket-forming Celleporaria palmata is re-evaluated and subsequently revised. The limestone comprises two parasequences in a transgressive systems tract, and deposition occurred at palaeodepths between 30 and 120 m. At intervals, tectonic movements lowered relative sea level and sent slumps of shallow-water fauna downslope. The depositional history was validated using independent sets of data: sediment structure and grain size, palaeobathymetry using bryozoan growth forms and occurrences of modern representatives of bryozoans and other taxa, basin configuration, and regional tectonics. Concordance of these lines of evidence provides a means of evaluating confidence in palaeoenvironmental inferences.
Keywords:Celleporaria                Bryozoans  Palaeoecology  Cool-water carbonates  Eastern Mediterranean  Pliocene–  Pleistocene
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