A high-resolution cyclostratigraphic and magnetostratigraphic study was carried out on cyclically bedded successions
of middle Miocene lacustrine to distal alluvial fan-floodplain deposits from the Calatayud basin, in northeast Spain.
Eight (partially overlapping) subsections near the village of Orera are correlated in detail using distinct sedimentary
cycle patterns or by following marker beds in the field. Together they form the Orera Composite Section (OCS).
Sedimentary cycles are recognised on at least two different scales. The basic small-scale cycles in the OCS consist of an
alternation of grey and, occasionally, red clays with white, dolomite-rich, carbonate beds. They are arranged in largerscaled,
so-called large-scale cycles based on repetitive changes in the overall carbonate-clay lithology. Two other, but
less distinct, types of intermediate scale cyclicity are also recognised. In terms of depositional environment, the cycle
hierarchy is interpreted to represent periodic lake expansion over the palaeo-alluvial fan-floodplain area. The
palaeomagnetic results yield a reliable magnetostratigraphic record, which confirms the cyclostratigraphic correlations
between the subsections in detail. Rock magnetic experiments reveal that haematite is the main magnetic carrier of the
primary component. The magnetostratigraphy of the OCS is correlated straightforwardly with the geomagnetic polarity
time scale. This resulted in an age of 10.7-12.8 Ma for the entire succession, which is supported by fossil micromammal
findings. In addition, it also reveals the presence of two, possibly three, short new polarity intervals. Based on the
number of cycles in the OCS the average periodicity of the basic small-scale cycles is approximately 23 000 yr, while the
large-scale cycle indicates a periodicity of 400 000 yr. This suggests that these sedimentary cycles are controlled by
astronomically induced climate changes causing lake-level fluctuations and thus resulting in the deposition of
carbonate-clay cycles. The continental sequences of the OCS provide a unique opportunity to extend the astronomical
polarity time scale into the middle Miocene. The overlap of such continental sequences in the Mediterranean area with
time-equivalent astronomically induced marine sequences is fundamental for establishing marine^continental, bed-tobed,
correlations and for understanding regional climate change