301 research outputs found
Middle Miocene (Serravallian) rhodoliths and coralline algal debris in carbonate ramps (Betic Cordillera, S Spain)
Serravallian (middle Miocene) coralline algal assemblages at the southern
margin of the Guadalquivir Basin (southern Spain) occur as rhodoliths
preserved in situ or very close to their growth habitats
(autochthonous–parautochthonous assemblages) and also as reworked
remains (allochthonous assemblages). The former assemblages consist of
spherical rhodoliths built up by encrusting to warty plants and also of large
fragments of branches, whereas the latter are mostly unrecognizable small
fragments occurring in channeled packstone–grainstone beds. In both cases,
the most abundant components are members of the order Hapalidiales
(Mesophyllum roveretoi, Mesophyllum sp., Lithothamnion ramosissimum,
and less frequently Phymatolithon group calcareum and Lithothamnion
group corallioides). Laminar growths of Lithoporella minus and branches of
Spongites group fruticulosus and Sporolithon sp. occur very rarely. There are
also anecdotal records of Subterraniphyllum thomasii, extending its upper
stratigraphic range up to the Serravallian in the western Tethys. The
autochthonous–parautochthonous coralline algal assemblages formed in a
middle ramp, at several tens of meters of water depth, as suggested by the
dominance of Hapalidiales. The allochthonous assemblages represent
fragments of coralline algae derived from the middle ramp and redeposited
in deeper settings, most likely the outer ramp, due to storm-generated currents.Instituto de Salud Carlos III
Spanish Government PGC2018-099391-B-100Junta de Andalucia RNM-19
Trough cross-bedded rhodolith limestones in the Atlantic-linked Ronda Basin (Messinian, Southern Spain)
Rhodolith limestones occur in the upper part of the Miocene infill of the Ronda
Basin in southern Spain. This basin was an embayment at the southern margin of
the Atlantic-linked Guadalquivir Basin, the foreland basin of the Betic Cordillera.
Messinian rhodolith limestones crop out in the mesa of the Roman settlement
Acinipo. They mostly consist of trough cross-bedded rhodolith rudstones,
which change basinward to large-scale planar cross-bedded rhodolith
rudstones, which in turn pass laterally to planar cross-bedded and flatbedded
bryozoan rudstones. Rhodoliths in rudstones are generally broken,
exhibiting several phases of breakage and restarted growth of coralline algae.
Many rhodoliths also show asymmetrical growth. The rudstone matrix is a
packstone with fragments of coralline algae, bryozoans, calcitic bivalves,
echinoids, and foraminifers. Large lithoclasts from the basement, heavily
bored by bivalves, are common in the rhodolith rudstone, especially in the
most massive type. Rhodolith characteristics and sedimentary structures
suggest that trough cross-bedded rhodolith rudstones accumulated in
submarine dunes moved by storm surges in a littoral wedge at the western
side of a small bay (the Ruinas de Acinipo bay) in the Ronda Basin. Large-scale
planar cross-bedded coralline algal and bryozoan rudstones formed in the
foresets of the wedge progradation below the storm-wave base. The
dominance of Lithophyllaceae and Hapalidiales, with scarce representatives
of Corallinaceae in the coralline algal assemblages, reflects that Ronda and
Guadalquivir basins opened to the Atlantic Ocean.Spanish Government
PGC 2018-099391-B-I0
Coralline Algae at the Paleocene/Eocene Thermal Maximum in the Southern Pyrenees (N Spain)
During the Paleocene/Eocene Thermal Maximum, ~55.6 Ma, the Earth experienced the
warmest event of the last 66Ma due to amassive release of CO2. This event lasted for ~100
thousands of years with the consequent ocean acidification (estimated pH = 7.8-7.6). In this
paper, we analyze the effects of this global environmental shift on coralline algal
assemblages in the Campo and Serraduy sections, in the south-central Pyrenees
(Huesca, N Spain), where the PETM is recorded within coastal-to-shallow marine
carbonate and siliciclastic deposits. In both sections, coralline algae occur mostly as
fragments, although rhodoliths and crusts coating other organisms are also frequent.
Rhodoliths occur either dispersed or locally forming dense concentrations (rhodolith beds).
Distichoplax biserialis and geniculate forms (mostly Jania nummulitica) of the order
Corallinales dominated the algal assemblages followed by Sporolithales and Hapalidiales.
Other representatives of Corallinales, namely Spongites, Lithoporella as well as
Neogoniolithon, Karpathia, and Hydrolithon, are less abundant. Species composition
does not change throughout the Paleocene/Eocene boundary but the relative abundance
of coralline algae as components of the carbonate sediments underwent a reduction. They
were abundant during the late Thanetian but became rare during the early Ypresian. This
abundance decrease is due to a drastic change in the local paleoenvironmental conditions
immediately after the boundary. A hardground at the top of the Thanetian carbonates was
followed by continental sedimentation. After that,marine sedimentation resumed in shallow,
very restricted lagoon and peritidal settings, where muddy carbonates rich in benthic
foraminifera, e.g., milioliids (with abundant Alveolina) and soritids, and eventually
stromatolites were deposited. These initial restricted conditions were unfavorable for
coralline algae. Adverse conditions continued to the end of the study sections although
coralline algae reappeared and were locally frequent in some beds, where they occurred
associated with corals. In Serraduy, the marine reflooding was also accompanied by
significant terrigenous supply, precluding algal development. Therefore, the observed
changes in coralline algal assemblages during the PETM in the Pyrenees were most likely
related to local paleoenvironmental shifts rather than to global oceanic or
atmospheric alterations.Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacioon PGC2018-099391-B-100Junta de Andalucia RNM-190Basque Government Research Programme PGC2018-099391-B-100
IT930-1
Alpujárride Carbonates (S. Spain). First atlantic marine deposits?
Publicado en: Martín, J.M. and Braga, J.C. (1987). Alpujárride carbonate deposits (southern Spain). Marine sedimentation in a Triassic Atlantic. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 59: 243-260. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0031-0182(87)90083-6]The Betic Cordillera (Southern Spain) constitutes the westernmost segment of the Alpine Chains. The Alpujárride Complex, from the the Internal Zone of the Betic Cordillera, exhibits a thick (up to 2000 m in thickness), Alpine-type, Middle-Upper Triassic marine-carbonate sequence. Stratigraphic correlations and facies-belt distributions reveal that the Triassic Alpujárride basin opened westwards to the sea, towards an Atlantic in the west, and not towards the Tethys in the east. The Alpujárride carbonate deposits are thought to have been deposited in an early Atlantic and to have been emplaced later in a western Mediterranean position by transform movements and overthrust. In this talk a review of the most significant Alpujárride carbonate facies, together with some of the most relevant diagenetic features, are also shown.La Cordillera Bética es el segmento más occidental de la Cadena Alpina. El Complejo Alpujárride, perteneciente a la Zona Interna de la Cordillera Bética, está fundamentalmente caracterizado por la presencia de una potente secuencia (hasta 2000 m de potencia) de carbonatos marinos, de edad Triásico Medio-Superior y facies Alpina. Las correlaciones estratigráficas y la disposición de los cinturones de facies revelan que la Cuenca Triásica Alpujárride abría hacia el Oeste, hacia posiciones Atlánticas y no hacia el Este (antiguo Tethys). Se infiere que los carbonatos Alpujárrides depositaron en un incipiente Atlántico y fueron posteriormente desplazados hacia posiciones Mediterráneas por fallas transformantes y cabalgamientos. En esta charla se muestran también las facies más representativas de los carbonatos Alpujárrides y los rasgos diagenéticos más relevantes
Eocene to Pliocene coralline algae in the Queensland Plateau (northeastern Australia)
Sediments containing coralline algae in the Queensland Plateau range from the middle Eocene to the early Pleistocene in age.
In the middle Eocene sediments, the corallines occur as highly fragmented and eroded particles in temperate, platform
carbonates (grainstones and rudstones) with abundant bryozoans, benthic foraminifers, and bivalves. They occasionally interbed
with thin intervals of tropical to subtropical sediments that contain abundant Halimeda, coral debris, and coralline fragments,
mainly of Lithoporella and Mesophyllum. In the upper Oligocene sediments, similar temperate carbonates, in which small, scarce,
unidentifiable coralline fragments can be seen, also occur.
The lower Miocene platform carbonates consist of grainstones and packstones having a tropical assemblage with corals and
Halimeda, together with a shallow-water coralline association of geniculate (Jania, Corallina, Amphiroa) and encrusting forms
(Lithoporella and Spongites). Allochthonous fragments of geniculate and encrusting corallines {Mesophyllum and Lithothamnion)
of early Miocene age occur in clasts in bioclastic floatstones (debris-flow deposits) of middle Miocene age. The algal composition
points to an outer-shelf origin for these clasts.
The middle Miocene carbonate sediments that contain corallines are also tropical and consist of bioclastic packstones to
wackestones, with Halimeda, and corals. Coralline-algal debris is predominantly composed of loose, abraded, branching thalli
of Sporolithon and Lithothamnion, and small rhodoliths (up to 2 cm). The nuclei of most of the rhodoliths consist of a small
branch fragment. They are encrusted by laminar growths of Lithothamnion, Mesophyllum, Hydrolithon, and Sporolithon. Some
fragments of the rare coralline genus Aethesolithon also have been found. The depositional environment is that of a low-energy,
neritic, open platform, as can be deduced from the predominance of delicate branching growths, the smaller size of the rhodoliths,
the abundance of fine-grained sediments, and the scarceness of reworking.
Lower Pliocene corallines occur as redeposited elements in debris flows. They appear mainly as very thin laminae in
foralgaliths that are intimately associated with encrusting foraminifers. The most common alga is Lithoporella.
The present-day, shallow-water, reefal coralline associations dominated by members of the subfamily Mastophoroideae were
not detected in any of the sediments drilled in the Queensland Plateau
Structure and Composition of Rhodolith Beds from the Sergipe-Alagoas Basin (NE Brazil, Southwestern Atlantic)
This study was funded by the CoordenacAo de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES-Finance Code 001) and FundacAo de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro- Jovem Cientista do Nosso Estado (FAPERJ/JCNE-Fellow to Leonardo T. Salgado).Rhodolith beds are biogenic benthic habitats mainly formed by unattached, non-geniculate
coralline algae, which can be inhabited by many associated species. The Brazilian continental shelf
encompasses the largest continuous rhodolith bed in the world. This study was based on samples
obtained from seven sites and videos taken by a Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) at four transects
off the Sergipe-Alagoas Coast on the northeast Brazilian shelf. ROV operations and bottom trawl
sampling revealed the occurrence of rhodolith beds between 25 and 54 m depths. At the shallower
depths, fruticose (branching) rhodoliths (maërl) appear in troughs of ripples, and other non-branching
rhodoliths occur associated with corals and sponge patches surrounded by bioclastic sand. Rhodoliths
also occur in patches from 30 to 39 m depth; some are fused, forming larger, complex tridimensional
structures. At deeper depths, from 40 to 54 m, the abundance of rhodoliths increases and occur
associated with fleshy macroalgae on a smooth seafloor; some rhodoliths are fused into complex
structures, locally some are fruticose (maërl), and others are partially buried by fine-grained sediment.
The collected rhodoliths vary from fruticose in two sites to encrusting to lumpy, concentric and
boxwork nodules in the rest; their size ranges from small (<1.5 cm) to large (~6 cm) and are mostly
sub-spheroidal to spheroidal. A total of 16 red algal morpho-taxa were identified in the study sites.
Two phases of growth can be distinguished in some rhodoliths by changes in color. The brownish
inner cores yielded ages of 1600–1850 cal years before the present, whereas outer layers were much
younger (180–50 years BP old). Growth layers appeared to have been separated by a long period of
burial in the seafloor sediment. Other rhodoliths have ages of hundreds of years.Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES) 001Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro-Jovem Cientista do Nosso Estado (FAPERJ/JCNE
The Messinian record of the outcropping marginal Alborán basin deposits: significance and implications
The Messinian record of marginal Alboran basins, such as the Sorbas Basin in southern Spain, consists of a shallow-marine
succession with intercalated evaporites. The pre-evaporite sequence comprises a bryozoan-bivalve, temperate-carbonate unit
overlain by tropical carbonates. The latter, in turn, consists of two superimposed units: a bioherm unit with coral (Porites, Tarbellastraea, and Siderastraea) and algal (Halimeda) mounds, and a coral (Porites)-stromatolite fringing reef unit. Climatic
fluctuations in the Alboran area, linked to the Neogene glacial-interglacial oscillations, are thought to be responsible for the
change from temperate to tropical conditions.
Evaporites are mainly selenite gypsum deposits. The first post-evaporite unit is a mixed siliciclastic-carbonate marginal
deposit, with small coral (Porites) patches and huge microbial (stromatolite and thrombolite) domes, changing basinward to
silts and marls containing planktonic foraminifers.
An incised erosion surface was scoured on top of the pre-evaporitic fringing reef unit. This erosion surface formed during
drawdown and desiccation of the Mediterranean Sea, when huge masses of salt were deposited in its center. Deposition of gypsum at the very margin of the Alboran Sea took place later in small, barred, satellite perched basins. In these silled basins
marine incursions became more and more frequent until a full connection with the Mediterranean Sea was established by the
end of the Messinian. Reflooding was completed during the Messinian, as demonstrated by the marine marls with planktonic
foraminifers found on top of the evaporites. This situation is comparable to that of the western Mediterranean (DSDP Site 372;
ODP Site 975), where the upper evaporites are directly overlain by Messinian marls with planktonic foraminifers. During the
initial stages of marine recolonization, microbes coexisted with, but outcompeted, the normal marine biota. This resulted in the
widespread proliferation of microbial carbonates (stromatolites and thrombolites).This work was supported by DGICYT (Spain) Project PB93-1113
and by “Fundación Ramón Areces” Project: “Cambios climáticos en
el sur de España durante el Neógeno.
A model for the development of rhodoliths on platforms influenced by storms: middle Miocene carbonates of the Marion Plateau (northeastern Australia)
Middle Miocene carbonates of the Marion Plateau consist of dolomitized bioclastic floatstones and rudstones with rhodoliths
(up to 6 cm in size) as the most prominent component. These rhodoliths are embedded in a bioclastic matrix with Halimeda,
echinoids, bivalves, gastropods, bryozoans, small coralline fragments, benthic (and planktonic) foraminifers, and rare dasyclads.
Corals (not abundant) occur only as fragments and may serve as nuclei for some of the rhodoliths.
Two main types of rhodoliths are evident. The commonest type is formed by Lithothamnion and Sporolithon, together with
minor Hydrolithon, Mesophyllum, Spongites, and Lithoporella. The other type is made up mainly of Mesophyllum. Laminar
growths are always predominant inside the rhodoliths. Both the growth types and the algal associations are characteristic of
rhodoliths that formed at depths of some tens of meters and below the normal wavebase. Similar coralline associations presently
occur in the Indo-Pacific area at depths between 30 and 80 m. Clearly, these depths are below the normal wavebase, but within
the reach of storms.
Encrusting foraminifers, serpulid worm tubes, bryozoans, and vermetids are sometimes important elements within these
rhodoliths and occur either as more-or-less discrete layers interbedded with the coralline growths or in their nuclei. Bioclastic
sediment is also incorporated within the rhodoliths. Some of the rhodoliths now appear partially broken and, presumably, were
reworked in the environment of deposition. Others exhibit several phases of growth and reworking. Some of them have also been
bored. The context in which these rhodoliths developed was that of a neritic, open-platform environment. They were reworked
and partially broken and abraded during storms and then grew once more during the intervening calm periods. The internal
structure of the rhodoliths is complex in detail, with successive coralline laminae encrusting more-or-less eroded former growths,
and in turn being partially destroyed during the next storm event
Tectonic control on the palaeogeographic evolution of thrust-top basins at the active margin of the Guadalquivir Basin (central Betic Cordillera, S Spain)
The Guadalquivir Basin is the foreland basin of the Betic Cordillera (S Spain).
Closest to the orogen, several thrust-top
basins evolved during the Late Miocene
in the central part of the cordillera. Here, we study the Upper Miocene deposits
in five of these satellite basins: Montefrío, Iznájar-Cuevas
de San Marcos,
Antequera, Bobadilla Estación and Teba, in order to (1) update the stratigraphic
framework, (2) infer a depositional model, (3) establish the relationship between
sedimentary record and tectonic context and (4) reconstruct the palaeogeography
of the area during the Late Miocene. Upper Miocene sediments mostly consist
of mixed carbonate-terrigenous
deposits. Facies characterization allows inferring
a sedimentary model corresponding to a ramp with foreshore deposits changing
to a shoal belt offshore in the inner ramp. Swaley and hummocky cross-stratified
deposits formed in the transition to the middle ramp, and plane parallel
carbonate beds in the distal middle-outer
ramp. Factory facies, dominated by
rhodoliths and bryozoans, also occur in the middle-outer
ramp environments.
Silts and marls formed in the deepest outer ramp and basin settings respectively.
Breccias accumulated at the toe of palaeocliffs and conglomerates and massive
coarse sands were deposited in fluvio-deltaic
systems. Conglomerates and sands
were also reworked as gravity flows and redeposited offshore. Local facies include
rudstones-grainstones
displaying large-scale
trough-cross
bedding formed
in a strait in Montefrío, and marls with chalky carbonates deposited in a shallow
marine, sheltered lagoon with hydromorphic soils in Bobadilla Estación. The
study basins evolved in an N-S
compressive tectonic context responsible of the
emersion of the main Betic reliefs. Concomitantly, E-W
and ESE-WNW
extension
originated the main depocentres. The influence of the tectonic activity on the
sedimentary infills is indicated by the presence of synsedimentary deformations
and several diachronic unconformities, which are younger westward. Tectonism,
in turn, also controlled the palaeogeographic evolution during the late Tortonian-early
Messinian interval.Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades/Agencia Estatal de Investigación (MCIN/AEI), Grant/Award Number: PID2022-142806NB-100 and PGC2018-099391-B-100ERDFJunta de Andalucía, Grant/Award Number: RMN19
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