首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The Paleocene (Danian) Clayton Formation of western Alabama, USA, includes multiple marine shelf parasequences, each comprising a relatively thick marl, capped by a thin limestone, the latter variably reflecting marine flooding episodes. The marls host relatively large firmground burrow systems that penetrate 50–60 cm beneath, and are cast by, superjacent limestones. Excavation of two partially exposed burrow systems – one beneath a highstand parasequence-bounding flooding surface and the other beneath an overlying coplanar sequence boundary/transgressive surface (SB/TS) – reveals complex, primarily horizontal, irregularly branching networks. The former, allied with Thalassinoides paradoxicus, lacks wall bioglyphs, whereas the latter, allied with Spongeliomorpha iberica, is characterized by pervasive, mainly rhombohedral wall bioglyphs that reflect a relatively more firm substrate. Contrasts between these burrow systems are consistent with sequence stratigraphical context and inferred differences in the mechanism and magnitude of depositional hiatuses responsible for firmground development. Both excavated burrow systems likely represent cumulative structures produced by multiple organisms over extended periods of time. The cumulative nature and potential taphonomic biases associated with these and comparable burrow systems in the stratigraphical record preclude confident interpretation of tracemakers and their behaviours. The Clayton burrow systems likely were produced by one or more species of decapod crustacean that engaged in suspension-feeding, surface detritus feeding, gardening or some combination thereof.  相似文献   

2.
Summary In the Western Dinarides the Lower Liassic carbonates are underlain by Upper Triassic “Hauptdolomit”, whereas the first appearance of the foraminiferOrbitopsella praecursor (Gümbel) marks the beginning of the Middle Liassic. Their composition, observed at several localities in Western Croatia, shows a correlation of sedimentation events, which took place during Early Liassic on the Adriatic-Dinaridic carbonate platform. Facies variability is interpreted as result of autocyclic sedimentary processes on which the carbonate platform reacted by periodical oscillations of sea-bottom near the fair-weather wavebase. As a consequence, the Lower Liassic carbonate successions in the Dinarides is characterized by stacking of two main types of coarsening-upward parasequences: (1) the basal part of the Lower Liassic succession is represented by parasequences composed of mudstones or pelletal-bioclastic wackestones as their lower members, and peloidal-bioclastic wackestone/packstones to grain-stones as their upper members; and (2) the upper part of the Lower Liassic succession with parasequences consisting of mudstones or pelletal-bioclastic wackestones overlain by ooid grainstones. Judging from the composition of parasequences and thickness relations of their members, the first type is interpreted to comprise late transgressive system tract (ITST) and/or early highstand system tract (eHST), while the second type corresponds to a late highstand system tract (1HST) and/or early lowstand system tract (eLST) of a third-order sequence.  相似文献   

3.
Summary At Collades de Bastus, Catalonian Pyrences, a Santonian mixed siliciclastic-carbonate succession indicates two proximal-distal gradients, and records two styles of stratigraphical development upon relative sea-level change. The succession consists of four small-scale sequences (5.1 to 5.4) within the highstand systems tract of the. “Valicarca-5” depositional sequence of Simo (1993), and is topped by a drowning sequence (small-scale sequence 5.5). The investigated succession (Collades Member) accumulated near the margin of the south-Pyrenean shelf, shortly before development of the south-vergent Boixols thrust system. Deposition of the Collades Member commenced with moderate sea-level rise accompanied by increased siliciclastic input. In the larger, eastern outcrop sector the Collades Member consists of a succession of neritic marls with four intercalated intervals each deposited from a carbonate shelf. Each carbonate interval consists of stacked upward-shoaling cycles interpreted as parasequences. From bottom to top, most parasequences consist of a coral-sponge-rudist bioconstruction, a rudist biostrome, and bioclastic limestones. Depositional sequences 5.1 to 5.4 developed by overstep of shelf carbonates with neritic marls, corresponding to the transgressive systems tract (TST) and to part of the highstand systems tract(HST) The carbonate facies tract of the HST consists of stacked parasequences that become thinner up-section and record a westward component of progradation. Each highstand carbonate interval is overlain by a stack of carbonate parasequences that become thicker up-section and, down depositional dip, by neritic marls. Together, the upward-thickening parasequence stack and the laterally adjacent overlying succession of neritic marls comprise the TST and part of the HST of the successive sequence. The sequence boundary is the level of maximum shoaling within each carbonate shelf interval. The uppermost sequence 5.5 is a drowning sequence (cf. Simo 1993). In the western outcrop sector, the Collades Member consists of hummocky cross-laminated to bioturbated sandy calcarenites, of neritic marls and of relatively thin intervals of coral-sponge-rudist limestones. Sequence development may have started with deposition of sharp-based bedsets of sandy calcarenites that both eastward and up-section become thinner and grade into neritic marls. Together, the succession of sandy calcarenites and neritic marls may comprise the TST and, possibly, part of the HST. In the HST neritic marls and, locally, coral-sponge-rudist bioconstructions accumulated. Deposition of some calcarenite bedsets seems to have started near or closely after maximum progradation of each carbonate shelf in the eastern part of outcrop. The stratigraphic architecture of the Collades Member indicates, for the eastern outcrop sector, an east-west proximal-distal gradient, whereas the western sector records a west-east gradient. The opposite gradients result from outcrop intersection subparallel to oblique to general northward depositional dip, across two distinct shelf depositional systems.  相似文献   

4.
This study integrates ichnological and sedimentological data to refine depositional sequences and interpretations of sea-level dynamics for the shallow marine, Albian–Cenomanian Aitamir Formation in northeastern Iran. Three ichnofabrics are present in a succession of glauconitic mudstone and sandstone. This is a sequence that grades upward from a lower glauconitic sandstone unit with trough cross-stratification, hummocky and ripple cross-lamination into a fining-up unit of mudstone with intercalated sandstone beds. The lower unit contains an ichoassemblage of the OphiomorphaPalaeophycus ichnofabric (upper shoreface), whereas the upper unit bears ichnoassemblages of the Thalassinoides ichnofabric (in a distinctive level at the top cycle which demarcates the base of the next cycle) (middle shoreface) and the ChondritesPlanolites ichnofabric (lower shoreface). An upper shoreface–lower shoreface trend from the OphiomorphaPalaeophycus ichnofabric to the ChondritesPlanolites ichnofabric represents a deepening-upward sequence. An integrated sedimentological and ichnological approach has allowed the recognition of the internal organization of the sequence and the characterization of significant discontinuity surfaces at sequence scales. Thalassinoides ichnofabric reveals colonization of firmgrounds during prolonged times between erosion and deposition related to transgressive surfaces. Transgressive surfaces (sequence boundaries) are generally well-cemented and marked by increased glauconite content, and densely crowded, predominantly vertical or oblique, relatively large, very distinct, unlined, and uncompacted burrows (omission suite) and are associated with rare highly abraded and fragmented shell remains.  相似文献   

5.
Upper Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous siliciclastic shallow water sediments of the Kachchh Basin, western India, form strongly asymmetric coarsening-upward cycles, which are interpreted as recording changes in relative sea level (deepening-shallowing cycles). These cycles correspond to depositional sequences, in which deposits of the lowstand systems tract are not present, the sequence boundary coinciding with the transgressive surface. Shell concentrations are found in the transgressive lags at the base of the transgressive systems tract (TST), in the maximum flooding zone (MFZ), and at or close to the top of the highstand systems tract. They belong to six assemblages, five of them dominated by large bivalves such as Seebachia, Herzogina, Gryphaea, Gervillella, Megacucullaea, Pisotrigonia and Indotrigonia, the sixth by the coral Amphiastraea. Three types of shell concentrations can be distinguished that differ from each other in a number of ecological and taphonomic features, such as species diversity, preservation quality, orientation in cross-section, percentage of disarticulation, and degree of biogenic alteration. Characteristic features of concentrations at the base of the TSTs are moderate time-averaging, sorting, a preferred convex-up orientation, and nearly total disarticulation of shells. They are suggestive of an environment in which reworking and local transport were frequent events. Similar features are shown by concentrations near the tops of the HSTs, except that there shells were largely concentrated in lenses and in pavements rather than in beds as in the transgressive lags. Associated sedimentary structures indicate deposition above fair weather wave base in a high-energy environment. Concentrations occurring in the MFZ, in contrast, are autochthonous and highly time-averaged, having accumulated during times of low rates of sedimentation below storm wave base. This is supported by their high preservation quality (comparatively high percentage of articulated shells, shells of infaunal organisms commonly preserved in life position), biogenic alteration being the most important taphonomic agent. The dominant elements of these shell concentrations, i.e. Seebachia, Megacuccullaea, and Indotrigonia in the Upper Jurassic, and Pisotrigonia in the Lower Cretaceous, are endemic to the Ethiopean faunal province and belong to lineages that rapidly evolved during this time period.  相似文献   

6.
This paper documents the facies change in response to the Holocene transgression within five sediment cores taken in the lagoon of Mayotte, which contain a Type-1 depositional sequence (lowstand, transgressive and highstand deposits underlain by an erosive sequence boundary). Quantitative compositional analysis and visual examination of the bioclasts were used to document the facies changes. The distribution of the skeletal and non-skeletal grains in the lagoon of Mayotte is clearly controlled by (1) the rate and amplitude of the Holocene sea-level rise, (2) the pre-Holocene basement topography and (3) the growth-potential of the barrier reef during sea-level rise, and the changes in bathymetry and continuity during this period. The sequence boundary consists of the glacial karst surface. The change-over from the glacial lowstand is marked by the occurrence of mangrove deposits. Terrigenous and/or mixed terrigenous-carbonate muds to sandy muds with a mollusc or mollusc-ostracod assemblage dominate the transgressive deposits. Mixed carbonate-siliciclastic or carbonate sand to gravel with a mollusc-foraminifer or mollusc-coral-foraminifer assemblage characterize the early highstand deposits on the inner lagoonal plains. The early highstand deposits in the outer lagoonal plains consist of carbonate muds with a mollusc-foraminifer assemblage. Late highstand deposits consist of terrigenous muds in the nearshore bays, mixed terrigenous-carbonate sandy muds to sands with a mollusc-foraminifer assemblage on the inner lagoonal plains and mixed muds with a mollusc-foraminifer assemblage on the outer deep lagoonal plains. The present development stage of the individual lagoons comprises semi-enclosed to open lagoons with fair or good water exchange with the open ocean.  相似文献   

7.
Detailed facies analysis and event stratigraphy of an Upper Ordovician (Rocklandian–Edenian) cratonic ramp succession in eastern North America yields insights into eustatically driven sequence architecture and localized tectonic instability. Seven, predominantly subtidal, mixed carbonate-siliciclastic depositional sequences (3rd order) are identified and correlated across the length of a 275-km ramp–to–basin profile. Within the larger depositional sequences (3rd order) at least two smaller orders (4th and 5th) of cyclicity are recognizable. Three systems tracts occur within each sequence (transgressive, TST; highstand, HST; regressive, RST) and are considered in terms of their component parasequences (5th order). Generally, TSTs are composed of skeletal grainstone–rudstone facies, HSTs are dominated by shaly nodular wacke-packstone facies, and RSTs are mostly calcarenite facies. Systems tracts, sequence boundaries and their correlative conformities, maximum flooding surfaces, and forced regression surfaces were traced from shallow shelf to basinal settings. This high-resolution framework also provides insight into the timing of tectonic fluctuations on this cratonic ramp during the Taconic Orogeny and documents the relative influence of tectonism on lateral facies distributions and eustatically derived cyclicity.  相似文献   

8.
The kilometer-sized and 100-meter-thick carbonate platforms of the Escalada Fm. I and II (Middle Pennsylvanian) accumulated in the foredeep of a marine foreland basin during the transgressive phases of 3rd-order sequences and were buried by prograding siliciclastic deltaic systems in the course of the subsequent highstand. The carbonate successions show a general upward trend from grain- to mud-supported carbonates, interfingering landwards with siliciclastic deposits of a mixed siliciclastic-carbonate shelf (Fito Fm.) adjacent to deltaic systems. The spatial variability of the carbonate facies and the high-frequency (4th–5th order) cycles, from the platform margin-outer platform to the deltaic systems, has been interpreted from basin reconstruction. Carbonate facies include skeletal grainstone to packstone, ooidal grainstone, burrowed skeletal wackestone, microbial and algal boundstone to wackestone forming mounds, various algal bafflestone and coral biostromes in areas with siliciclastic input. These high-frequency transgressive–regressive cycles are interpreted to record allocyclic forcing of high-amplitude glacioeustasy because they show characteristic features of icehouse cycles: thickness >5 m, absence of peritidal facies, and in some cases, subaerial exposure surfaces capping the cycles. In the mixed cycles, siliciclastics are interpreted as late highstand to lowstand regressive deposits, whereas carbonates as transgressive-early highstand deposition. The lateral and vertical variability of the facies in the glacioeustatic cycles was a response to deposition in a rapidly subsiding, active foreland basin subjected to siliciclastic input, conditions that might be detrimental to the growth of high-relief carbonate systems.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The Upper Permian Zechstein 2 Carbonate (Stassfurt Carbonate, or Ca2) platform facies of Northwest Germany can be subdivided into twelve subfacies types using slabbed cores from fifteen representative wells. Thin section and scanning microscopic analysis further provide subfacies-specific characteristics, based on distribution, size, shape, and spatial arrangement of the grains contained in the different subfacies types. Thirteen grain types can be distinguished within the different subfacies types on the Ca2-platform: 1) one type of oncoid, 2) one type of grapestone, 3) three types of peloids, 4) four types of ooids and 5) four types of aggregate grains. Both presence and composition of grains are indicative of the different subfacies types. There is also a relation between grain composition and porosity of the Ca2-subfacies types. The size and quantity of ooids correlate positively with increasing porosity, whereas an increasing amount of algal structures (algal-lamination) correlates negatively with porosity. The Ca2-platform carbonates almost exclusively represent highstand systems tract and lowstand systems tract deposits. The presence or absence of type-3 aggregate grains within the grainy shoal and algal-laminated shoal subfacies allows the assignment of these subfacies to highstand (grains absent) or lowstand (grains present) systems tracts deposits. The Ca2-highstand deposits can be subdivided into four shallowing-upward parasequences (PS3 to PS7) bounded by parasequence boundaries (PSB3 to PSB6) and Zechstein sequence boundary ZSB4. In contrast to macroscopic core studies, microscopic studies to identify Ca2-subfacies types can utilize cutting material. This allows reconstruction of the subfacies distribution on the Ca2-platform, and delineation of potentially porous zones in uncored Ca2 intervals.  相似文献   

10.
There have been surprisingly few empirical investigations of the fundamental principle that the architecture of depositional sequences exerts considerable control on observed patterns of faunal distribution and replacement. In this paper, we examine trilobite associations in two sequences of the Upper Ordovician (Sandbian) Bromide Formation of southern Oklahoma. Cluster analysis and ordination of genus abundance data identified five lithofacies‐related biofacies that are also differentiated by diversity patterns. Biofacies of the transgressive system tract (TST) of successive sequences are more similar to each other than they are to biofacies in the highstand systems tract (HST) of the same sequence. This similarity likely records dominance of large, robust convex sclerites in taphonomically degraded samples from condensed, strongly winnowed grainstone and rudstone. Horizons with articulated exoskeletons of isoteline trilobites preserved by obrution deposits occur most commonly in the early HST and record behavioural aggregations. Grainstone and rudstone of the later HST are less winnowed than those of the TST and show less fragmentation and sorting of sclerites. These changes in taphonomic conditions preserve ecological patterns more clearly. In most biofacies, rarefied alpha diversity (samples) and gamma diversity (biofacies) of middle‐ and outer‐ramp HST deposits are greater than in the TSTs, and biofacies replace each other down ramp. Diversity patterns do not agree with model predictions and other data sets that indicate low beta and high alpha diversity in the TST, likely because of taphonomic degradation. Vertical replacement of biofacies is expressed by the appearance of peritidal facies in which trilobites are rare. Biofacies shifts also characterize sequence boundaries and are most profound in the inner‐ramp successions characterized by sharp facies offsets. Comparison with bathymetrically similar deposits in the Taconic foreland basin showed similar diversity trends along environmental gradients, with some differences in shallow‐water settings attributed to taphonomic differences.  相似文献   

11.
Geological records of early Paleogene warming are rare in low latitudinal regions. The Indian subcontinent preserves records of this global event on western and eastern margins. We attempt to decipher paleoenvironmental setup and facies architecture of the paleo-equatorial early Eocene succession at the Vastan Lignite Mine, Gulf of Cambay, western India. The Vastan lignite succession was deposited in a low-energy coastal marsh-bay complex receiving only fine-grained muddy sediments from the weathered Deccan Traps. The lower part of the Vastan lignite deposit, designated as “Vastan Succession A”, comprises four depositional facies representing distinct environments (open bay, restricted bay, creek and channel, and coastal marsh) and one diagenetic facies. Palynofacies analysis, backed by precise sedimentological framework, records changes in terrestrial supply and fluctuating marine characters of bay and marshes. Eleven Palyno-Units are identified in distinct lithofacies sequences stacked in shallowing-upward cycles representing five parasequences that constitute a Transgressive Systems Tract (TST) deposit. Each parasequence starts with a transgressive sheet deposit, followed by shallowing-upward bay fill-marsh deposits. In the vertical succession, each parasequence acquires increasing marine character, culminating in a maximum flooding surface (shell carbonate) that represents large-scale coastal onlap during early Ypresian time. The TST is followed by a Highstand Systems Tract deposit, which shows an erosional surface at the top of the upper lignite indicating Lowstand Systems Tract and a sequence boundary at ~52 Ma. The Vastan Succession A represents TST (3rd-order cycle) deposits with parasequences and hemicycles representing 4th- and 5th-order cycles. The study demonstrates sea level rise along the Indian western coastal margin in response to early Eocene warming between ~55 and ~52 Ma with maximum transgression at 53.7 Ma.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The Gladenbach Formation is an approximately 30 m thick, well-segregated calciturbidite sequence, restricted to the H?rre belt of the eastern Rheinisches Schiefergebirge. It is middle Tournaisian in age (lowerPericyclus Stage, lower cd II of the German Culm zonation) and is an equivalent of the Liegende Alaunschiefer. The sequence is composed predominantly of minor turbiditic fining-upward cycles. Cycles start with massive calciturbidite beds. They are composed of fine-grained intraclastic-bioclastic grainstone/packstone, more or less ooid-bearing in the top of the formation, and/or radiolarian-rich packstone. Cycles continue with platy, dense limestones consisting of radiolarian-rich wackestone/packstone and microlithoclastic-microbioclastic wackestone/packstone. Different types of shales finish the fining-upward development. Minor cycles can be grouped into several 4th order cycles, composing a single 3rd order cycle. Towards the top, abundance of resedimented platform components, like ooids, calcareous smaller foraminifers, echinoderms, brachiopods, bryozoans and critical conodont genera, increases. Simultaneously, the thickness of the minor cycles decreases. This indicates a transgressive phase, characterized by increasing over-production of carbonate on platform realms and a correlated increase in the frequency of resedimentation events in the basin. The transgression corresponds to the well-documented global eustatic transgression of the Lowercrenulata andisosticha-uppercrenulata Zone of the conodont chronology. Thus, the Gladenbach Formation is interpreted as a transgressive systems tract/highstand systems tract. The Liegende Alaunschiefer is the time-equivalent, starved basin facies. Predominating hemipelagic calciturbidites of the lower Gladenbach Formation derive from the deeper shelf slope or from an intrabasinal swell, which might constitute a flexural bulge in front of the shelf slope. Turbidite sediments from the upper part of the formation derive from shelf-edge sands and the upper shelf slope. The source might be related to the ancient Devonian reef complex of Langenaubach-Breitscheid in the southwest.  相似文献   

13.
The Late Cenomanian Hummar Formation was studied in three sections in north and central Jordan, at Aameriyya, northeast of Na’ur and the Wadi Haur areas. The base in the Aameriyya area is marked by a subaerial unconformity overlain by a calcrete and a paleokarstic horizon, separating the underlying Fuheis Formation marl from the overlying Hummar Formation limestone. The emergent Aameriyya area is interpreted to have been a paleohigh, as a response to tectonism, and a basin and swell topography is invoked for the Late Cenomanian carbonate platform in this region. The Hummar Formation is believed to form one complete depositional sequence; the calcrete-karst represents a lowstand systems tract, the overlying 2-m massive rudstone/floatstone represents the transgressive systems tracts (TST), and the cortoid grainstone/packstone with clinoforms the highstand systems tracts. The topmost miliolid limestone is probably the late highstand topset of the sequence, followed upwards by the TST of the Shueib Formation marl of the next sequence. The sequence boundary at the upper contact of the Hummar Formation can be correlated regionally whereas the sequence boundary at its base with subaerial exposure has not been reported elsewhere in Jordan, the Negev, or Sinai.  相似文献   

14.
Summary A local intraplatform basin developed in the Gartnerkofel-Zielkofel area of the Carnic Alps (southern Carinthia, Austria) during the Middle Triassic (Ladinian). This basin was filled with a transgressive basinal sequence composed of the Uggowitz Formation and overlying Buchenstein Formation. At the northwestern slope of the Gartnerkofel, the platform carbonates of the Schlern Dolomite interfinger with the Buchenstein Formation, causing the formation of two depositional sequences. The Uggowitz Formation consists of the Uggowitz Breccia and the Kühweg Member. Sediments of the Uggowitz Breccia were formed by different types of gravity induced processes. The Kühweg Member is a thin sequence of silt-and fine-grained sandstones which were deposited in a slope to basin margin environment by turbidity currents. The overlying Buchenstein Formation consists of hemipelagic to pelagic limestones of Fassanian age with intercalated pyroclastic rocks (Pietra verde). Nodular limestones were deposited under slow rates of accumulation during a relative sea-level highstand. The uppermost Buchenstein Formation is composed of hemipelagic limestone beds with intercalated graded calcarenites and breccias of platform-derived debris, showing characteristics features of a fore-reef slope of the prograding Schlern Dolomite. Uggowitz Formation and basal Buchenstein Formation are interpreted as a transgressive systems tract, nodular limestones from the middle part of the Buchenstein Formation mark an early highstand systems tract, forereef slope sediments of the upper Buchenstein Formation formed during the beginning regression of a late highstand systems tract, the basal part of the overlying Schlern Dolomite probably reflects a lowstand systems tract. The intercalated bedded limestone facies within the Schlern Dolomite is characterized by large, platform derived blocks, slump structures, breccia beds, graded calcarenites and hemipelagic limestones indicating a forereef slope environent. This intercalated facies belongs to the Buchenstein Formation and interfingers with the Schlern Dolomite. Conodonts from this intercalated slope facies point to Late Fassanian age. Therefore, the two Middle Triassic depositional sequences of the Gartnerkofel area can be correlated with the depositional sequences ‘Ladinian 1’ and ‘Ladinian 2’ of the Dolomites, proposed byDe Zanche et al. (1993). A brief comparison with the basinal sequences of similar age of the karawanken Mountains and the Carnia is presented.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The marine Paleogene of the Tremp Basin in the Central Southern Pyrenees corresponds to four depositional sequences which are related to global eustatic third order cycles (Tejas A 2.3–2.6). Associated transgressive and downlap surfaces coincide with boundaries of biozones. Lowstand systems tracts consist of estuarine and braid delta systems. Transgressive and highstand systems tracts are composed of carbonate banks and reefs. Slow thrust-induced changes of the basin topography conditioned the basic type and the areal distribution of carbonate highstand and clastic lowstand systems. Rapid relative sea level changes controlled the activity and internal dynamic of the depositional systems. E-W directed blind thrust anticlines are covered during highstand periods by carbonate fringing banks withNummulites bars. N-S orientation of thrust anticlines leads to the evolution of reef-dominated barrier banks and shelf lagoonal homoclinal ramps. On-bank transport of carbonate sands dominates during transgressions, off-bank transport during highstand periods. Continuous thrusting during the Ilerdian caused angular unconformities only in combination with relative sea level fall. Sequence-internal onlap configurations result from contemporaneous tectonic tilting. Fourth order carbonate bank margin cycles contain well developed lowstand tracts due to increased subsidence rates. Fourth order flooding surfaces are marked by paleosoil horizons at their landward continuation.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract:  The Much Wenlock Limestone Formation of the Dudley inliers, West Midlands, contains one of the world's richest and most exquisitely preserved Silurian marine biotas. However, for most museum specimens, little is known of their exact provenance and mode of preservation. Detailed comparisons between outcrops and museum collections allow the identification of five faunal-lithological associations and numerous horizons of exceptional skeletal preservation. The associations are interpreted as a series of transient carbonate mid-platform environments extending from below storm wave-base to above fair-weather wave-base. Erosive surfaces, condensed sections, flooding surfaces and the stacking patterns of genetically related bed-sets (parasequences) have allowed the formation to be interpreted as a single third-order sequence stratigraphic cycle of sea-level change. The articulated preservation of taxa such as pelmatozoan echinoderms and trilobites can be attributed to either rapid burial by obrution deposits close to fair-weather wave-base or smothering by storm sequestered muds in slightly deeper-water settings. Such intervals of exceptional preservation are commonly associated with flooding surfaces, presumably reflecting reduced likelihood of reworking once rapid burial had taken place.  相似文献   

17.
Upper Jurassic‐Lower Cretaceous sponge biostromes and bafflestone mounds were common and widespread in European temperate to tropical marine environments. They declined markedly during the Late Cretaceous. Most sponge frameworks were paucispecific and ecologically simple, with only basic levels of succession or tiering. The occurrence of ecologically complex, lithistid sponge biostromes and mounds in the Cenomanian Quadersandstein Member, Regensburger Grünsandstein of the Saal Quarry, Bavaria, is therefore of special significance. These are ecologically the most complex sponge frameworks yet reported from the Cretaceous. Their size, morphology and ecological organization compare favorably with shallow‐water, sponge‐dominated frameworks in modern seas. The Saal Quarry sponge frameworks are generally associated with firmgrounds and condensed intervals in the transgressive systems tract of the Cenomanian‐Turonian, tectonoeustatic supercycle UZA‐2. The lowest sponge frameworks are up to 1 m high bafflestone mounds consisting of large, irregular, sheet‐ and mound‐like recumbent sponges overlain by diverse, cylindrical, pyriform, upward‐branching forms of Jerea and Siphonia. These biostromes overlie a condensed interval or firmground which locally contains small, in situ pyriform sponges (Jerea pyriformis Lamouroux) as well as Middle Cenomanian Inoceramus etheridgei Woods. The upper sponge frameworks consist of bafflestone mounds up to 4.4 m wide and 1.3 m high, composed of six lithistid sponge morphotypes, possibly representing several species of Jerea and Siphonia. The occurrence of Rotalipora cushmanni in strata overlying the upper sponge framework indicates a Late Cenomanian age. Morphotypes preserve internal sponge morphologies and partially dissolved spicules surrounded by a diagenetic halo of silicified, pelletoid grainstone and/or packstone. Silica cements were derived from spicule dissolution. Different combinations of these morphotypes dominate three to four successional stages of sponge framework growth, and show vertical ecological tiering within communities. This ecological zonation is consistent among frameworks, and is partially or wholly repeated between storm‐related disturbance events.  相似文献   

18.
Thomas Olszewski 《Facies》1996,35(1):81-103
Summary The Iola Limestone is the open-marine, carbonate portion of a Midcontinent cyclothem. It represents the transgressive and highstand systems tracts of a stratigraphic sequence. The sequence begins with a type 1 sequence boundary at the base of the Chanute Shale, which underlies the Iola. This surface can be recognized by the presence of a paleosol and as much as 15 m of incision. Part of the Chanute is probably an estuarine valley-fill package and represents the lowstand systems tract. The lowest member of the Iola Limestone is the Paola Limestone Member. Its base is sharp and locally has a thin shell lag. This contact is the transgressive surface and represents the onset of open-marine, clear-water carbonate sedimentation. It is a ravinement surface cut by a winnowing environment that appears as a ‘kink’ in the base-level surface. Landward of this ‘kink’, sediment accumulated to a subaerial base-level, but seaward of it sediment did not accumulate above a subtidal threshold probably controlled by wave base. Facies formed during regression also show the influence of a ‘kink’ in base-level. The Paola itself is the lower part of the transgressive facies tract. Overlying the Paola is the Muncie Creck Shale Member; its lower part is black and fissile, contains phosphate nodules, no unequivocally benthic fossils, and no discernible trace fossils. However, this facies is not present everywhere; in much of southeastern Kansas and just north of Kansas City, Missouri, it has been removed by submarine erosion. The only clues that this facies was ever deposited are reworked diagenetic phosphate nodules that occur as a lag on a hardground on top of the Paola. Where black shale and the immediately overlying, relatively unfossiliferous gray shale have been preserved, they are overlain by a shelly lag that incorporates bored and encrusted micritic cobbles-strong evidence of reworking. This erosional surface is interpreted as the maximum flooding surface. Such an interpretation suggests that the black shale formed during sea-level rise and coastal transgression rather than at sea-level highstand. This is further supported by geochemical properties of Midcontinent black shales. Overlying the maximum flooding surface are a thin gray shale (within the Muncie Creek) and the Raytown Lime-stone Member. In southern Kansas, the limestone contains an extensive phylloid-algal mound. In the subsurface, the elongate Raytown mound is perpendicular to the outcrop belt; it directly overlies a Precambrian structural element called the Bourbon arch, suggesting subtle tectonic control. In northern Missouri and in Nebraska, the upper Raytown contains carbonate tidal-flat deposits. The existence of these two facies suggests that the Raytown was deposited while base-level was stable rather than during base-level drop. The aggradational algal mound built into a positive sea-floor feature and did not shift position through the duration of the cycle. Progradational carbonate tidal flats had the chance to develop in the northern part of the field area; if base-level had been dropping, rapid regression would likely not have permitted accumulation of this facies at the top of the limestone. Coarse-grained deposits, an oncolite in southern Kansas and bioclastic packstones and grainstones in northern Kansas, indicate that the mound aggraded up to a subtidal base-level, presumably controlled by wave base. The carbonate tidal flats, on the other hand, filled accommodation space up to a subaerial base-level as they prograded out over this surface. There must have been two base-levels—one subtidal and the other subaerial—connected by the previously mentioned base-level ‘kink’ at the coastline. The Lane Shale, typically gray-green and silty, overlies the Iola. In a core from northern Missouri, the Lane Shale directly overlying the Raytown contains clay slickensides and a breccia of ‘fitted’ carbonate clasts, indicating subaerial exposure and qualifying the base of the Lane Shale as the top boundary of the Iola sequence. In northwestern Missouri, the Iola changes from a relatively clay-free limestone to mostly dark-gray, calcareous mudrocks with thin shell stringers. This represents a part of the basin dominated by clastic input. Stratigraphic interpretation implies that the Muncie Creek black shale formed during accommodation space increase and shoreline transgression. This is consistent with recent geochemical studies of Midcontinent black shales. This lithology formed as inland peat swamps underwent ravinement and organic matter was flushed onto the shelf. An influx of nutrients and plant material made available by sea-level rise and transgression while sediment was trapped in nearshore accommodation space was the primary cause of sediment starvation and anoxia in the basin.  相似文献   

19.
The Tale-Zang Formation in Zagros Mountains (south-west Iran) is a Lower to Middle Eocene carbonate sequence. Carbonate sequences of the Tale-Zang Formation consist mainly of large benthic foraminifera (e.g. Nummulites and Alveolina), along with other skeletal and non-skeletal components. Water depth during deposition of the formation was determined based on the variation and types of benthic foraminifera, and other components in different facies. Microfacies analysis led to the recognition of ten microfacies that are related to four facies belts such as tidal flat, lagoon, shoal and open marine. An absence of turbidite deposits, reefal facies, gradual facies changes and widespread tidal flat deposits indicate that the Tale-Zang Formation was deposited in a carbonate ramp environment. Due to the great diversity and abundance of larger benthic foraminifera, this carbonate ramp is referred to as a “foraminifera-dominated carbonate ramp system”. Based on the field observations, microfacies analysis and sequence stratigraphic studies, three third-order sequences in the Langar type section and one third-order sequence in the Kialo section were identified. These depositional sequences have been separated by both type-1 and type-2 sequence boundaries. The transgressive systems tracts of sequences show a gradual upward increase in perforate foraminifera, whereas the highstand systems tracts of sequences contain predominantly imperforate foraminifera.  相似文献   

20.
Richly fossiliferous marine sediments exposed along the Sonoran coastline of the Gulf of California near Punta Chueca provide an excellent setting in which to test (a) the strength of the association of skeletal concentrations with sedimentary hiatuses, (b) the utility of taphonomic evidence for reconstructing detailed histories of those non-depositional episodes, and thus (c) the largely unexploited potential of skeletal concentrations in the identification and interpretation of lithologically obscure unconformities and condensed sequences in shallow marine deposits. Sequence analysis based on discontinuity surfaces is possible in the complex, alluvial fan-to-shallow marine transition at Punta Chueca despite rapid facies changes. Progradation of depositional sequences that contain cobbles reworked from older terrace deposits indicates accumulation during a fall in eustatic sea level. The supratidal to subtidal conglomerates and sands contain a variety of predominantly molluscan shell concentrations that, on the basis of postmortem histories of shells, formed during periods of low net sedimentation (i.e. depositional hiatuses); the majority of these shell beds lie along discontinuity surfaces identified by independent physical stratigraphic evidence. Although not all discontinuity surfaces in the terrace are paved by shell material. and not all relative concentrations of shells indicate distinct discontinuities, the strength of the association between skeletal concentrations and stratigraphic hiatuses reveals the high degree of control on fossil occurrence by sedimentation rates, and indicates that skeletal concentrations can provide good clues to stratigraphically significant surfaces. Moreover, the detailed dynamics of non-depositional episodes are reliably revealed by taphonomic analysis of the associated fossil assemblages, improving interpretations of non-depositional episodes in local sedimentary history.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号