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Tytuł:
Mafic and ultramafic associations of ophiolite (possible Tethyan ophiolite) in the Panlin-Pyaunggaung area, Mogok, Myanmar
Autorzy:
Myint, Tin Aung
Ko, Mi Mi
Thin, Aung Kyaw
Peng, Touping
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202092.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Tethys
Myanmar
Opis:
The Panlin-Pyaunggaung area is situated within the Mogok Metamorphic Belt (MMB) in Myanmar. The MMB extends for over 1,000 km along the western part of ShanThai Terrene (also known as Sibumasu Terrene) from the Andaman Sea as a narrow linear belt, then sharply bends east-northeastward through the northern part of Mogok including Panlin-Pyaunggaung area toward the China-Myanmar border and finally further northward into the East Himalayan Syntaxis. It comprises a sequence of regionally high-grade metamorphic rocks, representing the amphibolite-granulite facies grade belt intruded by granitoid rocks of various ages. Metamorphic rock units exposed in the area are marbles, calc-silicates and gneisses. Igneous rocks are peridotite, dunite, serpentinite, gabbro, granite, leucogranite, syenite and pegmatite. The ultramafic rocks (Pyaunggaung peridotites) mainly occur in the northern part of Mogok and have been considered as tectonites. Ophiolite sequence which consists, from bottom to top, of upper mantle peridotites/dunites, layered ultramafic-mafic rocks, layered gabbros, and felsic dikes occurs in the area indicating the typical lower part of ophiolite suite. The present ultramafities are mainly dunite-peridotite (harzburgitic or dunitic composition). Magnetic susceptibility of ophiolites reflects the highest point (39.75 ∙ 10−3 SI units). It is found that the chromite spinel observed in ophiolites and it contains high Pm, Cr, Ni & V. These criteria suggested that ophiolites in the area were deep seated origin coming from the upper mantle source. Panlin-Pyaunggaung Ophiolites in the area fall within the field of the Alpine-type peridotite. High Ni–Low Al content corresponds to the suprasubduction zone (SSZ) ophiolites and might have a similar tectonic stetting of Tagaung-Myitkyina Ophiolite Belt in Myanmar.
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 53--53
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Mid-oceanic seamount carbonates in Eastern Paleotethyan suture zones
Autorzy:
Ueno, Katsumi
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202095.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Tethys
carbonates
Opis:
Mid-oceanic seamount-capping (atoll-type) carbonates make a popular stratigraphic entity in the geology of Japan since they are often seen as various-sized (but usually large and typically huge) exotic blocks within ancient (mostly Permian to early Cretaceous) accretionary complexes distributed in the Japanese Islands. These carbonates consist of very thick and pure (in the sense that it lacked input of continental detritus), usually massive and fossiliferous, shallow-marine limestone, and rest on oceanic-island basalts (OIB) of hot-spot origin, formed in the Panthalassa Ocean. Stratigraphically, they comprise a unique sedimentary succession that records long-term (sometimes over 80 myr.), continuous, shallow-marine environmental and biotic changes during late Paleozoic and early Mesozoic times of the oceanic sector with a stable tectonic setting, and can only be found within the accretionary orogen in the context of Ocean Plate Stratigraphy (OPS). Thus, the mid-oceanic seamount carbonate succession is a “surefire” geological item for the investigation of the ancient subduction zone and suture zone. On the basis of my research expertise working on these mid-oceanic carbonates in Japan over many years, especially in the Carboniferous–Permian Akiyoshi Limestone known as the most typical seamount-capping atoll-type carbonate body in the Panthalassa Ocean, I exported this, essentially “made-in-Japan” and “cultivated-in-Japan”, geological concept of “mid-oceanic seamount carbonates within the accretionary orogen” to Southeast Asian geology, for better understanding the general geotectonic subdivision and evolution of the relevant region, especially for clarifying the position of Paleotethyan suture zones and the geohistory of the Eastern Paleotethys Ocean. In today’s Southeast Asia, Paleotethyan mid-oceanic seamount carbonates are distributed in Northern Thailand and western Yunnan, SW China where Gondwana and Tethys meet together. Of these two regions, Northern Thailand is subdivided into three basic geotectonic domains; from east to west the Cathaysian Indochina Block, Sukhothai Zone (a Permian–Triassic island arc developed along the Indochina margin), and peri-Gondwanan Sibumasu Block. In the eastern part of Sibumasu, a geotectonically peculiar area called the Inthanon Zone can be identified on which Paleotethyan oceanic rocks including the Carboniferous–Permian Doi Chiang Dao Limestone of mid-oceanic seamount origin are widely distributed. This limestone succession, sometimes making kilometer-sized huge limestone blocks, is estimated to be 1000 m thick or more, and consists mostly of shallow-marine fossiliferous massive limestone without siliciclastic intercalation throughout. Basalts having intra-plate (oceanic volcanic island) geochemistry are observed at the base of the succession. Foraminifers, especially fusulines, are the fundamental fossil group for establishing its detailed chronostratigraphy, and they clarified that the limestone continuously accumulated from the Visean (middle Early Carboniferous) to the Changhsingian (latest Permian) over the time of 90 myr. In western Yunnan, the Changning–Menglian Belt is defined between the Lincang Massif (a Permian–Triassic island arc system formed along the easterly Simao Block with Cathaysian affinity) to the east and the peri-Gondwanan Baoshan Block to the west. The Changning–Menglian Belt, subdivided into the East, Central, and West zones, entirely has been regarded as a closed remnant (suture zone) of the Paleotethys Ocean, but actually it is only in the Central Zone where oceanic rocks are distributed. Paleotethyan mid-oceanic carbonates in this belt are called the Banka Limestone, which is over 1200 m in total thickness and generally massive and pure, being free from continental siliciclastic input for the entire succession spanning nearly 90 myr. Foraminiferal (mostly fusuline) biostratigraphy suggested continuous deposition ranging from the Visean to the Changhsingian without significant hiatus in the succession. Thus, the Banka Limestone in western Yunnan is exactly correlated in view of lithostratigraphy, chronostratigraphy, and tectonostratigraphy to the Doi Chiang Dao Limestone in Northern Thailand. In a broad geotectonic perspective, the Paleotethyan oceanic rocks including the Doi Chiang Dao Limestone, distributed in the Inthanon Zone are considered to form various-sized tectonic outliers upon autochthonous basement rocks of Sibumasu now, which consists of early Paleozoic– Triassic sedimentary, meta-sedimentary, and igneous intrusive rocks. Similarly, those distributed in the Central Zone of the Changning–Menglian Belt are structurally resting by almost flat-lying faults (thrusts) upon siliciclastic rocks of the West and/or East zones, which presumably represent passive-margin (continental slope) sediments of the westerly, Gondwanan Baoshan Block. These mid-oceanic rocks are interpreted to have been once incorporated within an accretionary prism formed by the subduction of the Paleotethyan oceanic lithosphere beneath the Permian–Triassic island arc system represented by the Lincang Massif–Sukhothai Zone. The resultant collision of the Cimmerian (peri-Gondwanan) Sibumasu–Baoshan Block to the Cathaysian Indochina–Simao Block, thus the closure of the Paleotethys Ocean in present-day Southeast Asia, at around Triassic–Jurassic boundary time emplaced rocks of the accretionary complexes (containing Paleotethyan oceanic rocks as exotic blocks) onto the marginal part of the Sibumasu–Baoshan Block as large thrust sheets (nappe).
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 75--76
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Unraveling the collisional history of the Western Carpathians through deep geophysical sounding
Autorzy:
Soni, Tanishka
Schiffer, Chrystian
Mazur, Stanisław
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202097.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Carpathians
Tethys
terranes
Opis:
The ALpine-CArpathian-PAnnonian (ALCAPA) block is one of the terranes involved in the Alpine-Tethys suture along with the North European Plate. In the Western Carpathians, this suture is supposed to be represented by the Pieniny Klippen Belt (PKB) which is a few kilometres wide and about 600 km long unit between the Outer Western Carpathians (OWC) and Central Western Carpathians (CWC) (Plašienka et al., 1997; Schmid et al., 2008). Unlike the Neotethian suture in the Western Carpathians, the PKB does not show the typical characteristics of a suture. The PKB is a sub-vertical unit with mainly shallow marine limestone and flysch deposits in a conspicuous “blockin-matrix” structure (Plašienka et al., 1997). The presence of “exotic” sediments in the PKB and the southernmost units of the OWC along with their shallow marine deposition environment led to the theory proposing the presence of a continental sliver called the Czorsztyn Ridge in the Alpine Tethys, dividing it into two oceanic/marine basins: the Magura Ocean to the north and the Vahic Ocean to the south (Plašienka, 2018). This controversial continental fragment possibly forming the basement for PKB successions, and its structural relationship with the adjoining OWC and CWC units, make it the main target of this project. The objective is to find evidence of the presence of this continental block, the Czorsztyn Ridge, which may have subducted along with the Vahic oceanic lithosphere underneath the CWC (Schmid et al., 2008). A passive seismic experiment will provide insight into the deep lithospheric structure across the PKP, testing the presence of a tectonic suture along with relaminated remnants of the Czorsztyn Ridge, and potential remnants of subducted or underthrusted lithosphere. Eighteen broadband stations have been deployed in a ~N-S transect (Fig. 1a) under the umbrella of the AdriaArray initiative, cutting across the PKB and Neotethian Meliata suture to the south. The data obtained during up to three years will complement 10 other permanent and temporary broadband stations, forming an approximate 370 km long profile and will be used to perform receiver function analysis and build structural and velocity models of the lithosphere (i.e., Schiffer, 2014; Schiffer et al., 2023) beneath the Western Carpathians. The horizontal extent of the imaging is shown in Figure 1b.
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 65--66
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Aptian greenhouse climate and icehouse interludes – alpine Tethyan archives revisited
Autorzy:
Weissert, Helmut
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202103.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Tethys
climate
Alps
Opis:
In this study we revisit two Cretaceous archives in the Alps, and we test hypotheses of major sea level falls related to ice age interludes in the Aptian. The first of the two successions in focus was formed along the northern margin of the alpine Tethys and is today preserved as Garschella Formation in the Helvetic nappes of Switzerland. Aptian phosphorites of the Luitere Beds containing Deshayites deshayesi and Dufreonia are overlain by up to tens of meters of siliciclastic shales, the Gams Beds. Gams Beds with low carbonate content are poorly dated, according to available biostratigraphies they are of Late Aptian age (nolani ammonite zone). Gams Beds are covered by up to 15 m glauconitic bioclastic sandstones and limestones (Brisi sandstone and limestone). The second locality we have revisited is Zürs in the Northern Calcareous Alps (NCA, Vorarlberg, Austria). There, a condensed succession of Jurassic-Cretaceous age records Southern Tethyan ocean history of a “submarine bank”. Jurassic radiolarian cherts are overlain by pelagic limestones of earliest Cretaceous age followed by an Aptian phosphorite hardground. These phosphorites are covered by an up to several meter thick succession of reworked crinoidal limestones and then by several tens of meters of “Kreideschiefer” (Lech Formation), which are of Albian to Cenomanian in age. Phosphorites at both localities record a time of hardground formation related to changes in Tethyan oceanography, triggered by a major perturbation of the global carbon cycle and by corresponding changes in climate and oceanography. Condensed sedimentation records intense current activity on submarine highs and along the northern Tethyan shelf. Remarkable is the poorly understood change in sedimentation following hardground formation at both locations during Late Aptian time. The Helvetic Gams Beds (Garschella Fm.) record increased shedding of siliciclastics along the northern Tethys, either related to increased weathering or to a drop in sea level. We propose, that an eustatic drop of seal level explains observed northern Tethyan shifts in Late Aptian sedimentation. A corresponding drop in sea level is recorded at other localities as the Oman Mountains, along the Algarve coast in Portugal or in the Basque-Cantabrian Basin. There, most prominent “cold snaps” or “ice age interludes during Aptian greenhouse climate” are dated as martinoides to nolani ammonite zone, they coincide with the deposition of the Gams Beds. Bioclastic limestones in the Helvetic succession and in the NCA record carbonate shedding at a time of renewed sea level rise following a major Aptian sea level drop. The Late Aptian prograding carbonate system of the NCA, considered as the source of crinoidal sands, was positioned along the northern margin of the evolving Eastern Alps while Brisi carbonate sands where shedded from a Northern Tethyan carbonate ramp. The Aptian condensed sediments of Helvetics and of NCA are indicators of extreme shifts in Aptian climate triggered by perturbations of the global carbon cycle. The Aptian-Albian Zürs succession provides additional information on the rapid transition of a passive continental margin with pelagic sediments into an Austroalpine foreland basin represented by “Kreideschiefer”.
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 78--78
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Reappraisal of the Changning-Menglian Belt as a Suture Zone for the Tethys in Western Yunnan, China: Late Paleozoic faunal and sedimentary evidence
Autorzy:
Huang, Hao
Zeng, Jianbing
Jin, Xiaochi
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202111.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Tethys
China
Paleozoic
Opis:
The Changning-Menglian Belt in western Yunnan, China has long been considered a major Tethyan suture in SE Asia, based mainly on fragmented Paleozoic ophiolites, slices of Devonian-Triassic radiolarian cherts and possible seamount limestones of Permo-Carboniferous age (Fig. 1). However, some students also argued for a setting of passive continental margin for this belt and a cryptic suture further east representing the vanished Tethyan Ocean (Ridd, 2015). To evaluate this hypothesis, we have been studying late Paleozoic strata and fusulinids in this belt for years. We recently collected late Carboniferous to Middle Permian fusulinids from various sections in this belt, including ascendingly Triticites assemblage, Sphaeroschwagerina sphaerica assemblage, Eoparafusulina assemblage, Chalaroschwagerina solita assemblage and Neoschwagerina assemblage. Further comparison reveals that the fusulinid taxonomy in this belt still differs from that in S China. For instance, the Early Permian fusulinids in this belt generally lack Pseudoschwagerina, a typical Cathaysian element. Moreover, quantitative analysis (Rarefaction) confirms that the generic diversity in this belt remains lower than in S China. These results supports that a substantial portion of the Permo-Carboniferous limestones in this belt originated from seamounts located far from the northern Gondwana margin, meanwhile slightly south of the equatorial region, also considering the couplet of carbonates and underlying basalts (OIB type). Furthermore, petrographic and geochemical analyses of the Carboniferous siliciclastic Nanduan Formation demonstrate a mature continental provenance and two peaks of detrital zircon ages (ca. 950 Ma and ca. 550 Ma) (Zheng et al., 2019). Notably, these two peaks are also shared by metasedimentary rocks (e.g., the Ximeng and Lancang Groups) widespread in this belt as well as peri-Gondwana blocks. These data suggest that the Paleozoic siliciclastics covering this belt’s eastern and western parts were derived from the Gondwana margin. Therefore, significant siliciclastic inputs from the Gondwana margin over much of this belt contradict the implied vast Paleozoic ocean in this belt. In contrast, the siliciclastic Nanpihe Group (Devonian-early Carboniferous) in the central part demonstrates a detritus source from continental arcs and clusters of detrital zircon ages of ca. 435 Ma and ca. 950 Ma, which correlates well to Silurian magmatism in the Simao and S China blocks. In conclusion, we propose that the Changning-Menglian Belt was part of the passive continental margin on the eastern flank of the Baoshan-Shan Block during the late Paleozoic, while and tectonostratigraphic slices of seamount limestones, Nanpihe Formation or even ophiolites are allochthonous and were displaced to their present position during the Late Triassic closure of the Tethys.
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 27--28
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Rifting and closure of two branches of the Tethys; from Neotethys to Alpine Tethys
Autorzy:
Fodor, Laszlo
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202112.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Tethys
Neotethys
rifting
Opis:
The western termination of the Neotethys is marked by a complex interaction of several small oceanic basins which were formed and closed progressively. The western end of the Neotethys was opened from Permian to Middle Triassic; spreading started from Anisian. The rifting was associated with acidic, sometimes basic magmatism; Permian intrusions are widespear in certain zones (Eastern Alps), and together with Middle Triassic volcanites, played a role in weakening of the extending continental lithosphere. The rifting process was interacting with evaporite tectonism in regions where Late Permian evaporites were formed potentially as a post-rift or intra-rift stage. Due to loading of the ovelying Early Triassic clastic-carbonate ramp sequence, and the still ongoing extensional deformation, and/ or gravitational sliding of shelf domains toward deepening extended continental margin, salt tectonics probably started in latest Early Triassic. The uprising salt walls strongly influenced shelf and eventually slope deposition; the minibasins between salt walls often hosted carbonate ramp or platform development while collapsing salt structures could turn to deep “intra-platform” basins. The salt tectonics controlled the continuing facies differentiation during the Late Triassic. The development of salt-cored normal faults are not characteristic for a typical post-rift passive margin, but due to their relation to underlying salt, facies differentiation was maintained. The earliest sign of rifting of the Alpine Tethys can be seen in the Late Triassic deep grabens (Southern Alps, southern Transdanubian Range). This is the reason that separation of salt-related deformation, and crustal extension is not evident in some zones. The closure of the Neotethys started with intra-oceanic subduction, probably with a double polarity, and the formation of a supra-subductional new oceanic lithosphere (the Vardar zone in some interpretations). The age of this process is somewhat controversial in different models. Isotopic ages of metamorphic sole of the Vardar ophiolites suggest 175–170 Ma while neutral to acidic differentiates in the eastern Vardar testify ongoing Late Jurassic oceanic magmatism (~155–155 Ma). A complex system of melange was formed under and in front of the emplacing upper plate Vardar ophiolite. While sub-ophiolitic melange with serpentinitic matrix formed below the overlying hot oceanic lithosphere, the sediment-hosted melange contains blocks from different zones of the passive margin and partly the overlying ophiolite. Stratigraphic ages indicate that this processes happend during the Middle and Late Jurassic. The obduction happened in latest Jurassic (Tithonian) indicated by reef limestone on top of ophiolites. This was followed by the imbrication of the underlying passive margine Adriatic continental lithospere during the entire Cretaceous and Cenozoic. Clastic foreland basins were formed within this lower plate supplied partly by the passive upper plate ophiolite. The Alpine Tethys went on intensive rifting which ended with break-up in late Middle or in the Late Jurassic on its southern Piemont-Ligurian branch. The onset of subduction is not exactly clear but could happen in the Late Cretaceous resulted in high-pressure metamorphism of the oceanic domains in the Eocene (Tauern window). The Transdanubian Range of Hungary was situated between the two oceanic domains during the whole Mesozoic. While this unit has not been buried and only deformed modestly, the sedimentary events reflect the complex evolution. Middle Triassic rifting resulted in disruption of Early Triassic mixed siliciclastic-carbonate ramp into platform and somewhat deeper grabens. Small-scale synsedimentary faults and neptunian dykes testify this phase. Away from the break-up zone, the area underwent important post-rift subsidence compensated by platform carbonate sedimentation through the Late Triassic. However, the trace of initial Late Triassic rifting is present in forms of synsedimentary faults in the western side, closer to the future Neotethys. Following the earliest Jurassic decline of platform biota, the ongoing Alpine rifting disintegrated the entire TR carbonate platform into shallower, sediment free ridges and somewhat deeper grabens. This rifting and subsidence resulted in deposition of pelagic red nodular limestone in the Aalenian-Bajocian. After cherty sedimentation in the Callovian–Oxfordian, very modest extension appeared in the latest Jurassic. Although this phase could be considered as the final extension of the Alpine Tethys rifting far to the west, it is more probable that in fact this is due to slight downbending of the TR below the distal ophiolite emplacement to the east. The Neotethyan influence prevaild in the eastern TR during the Early Cretaceous. A clastic foreland basin was supplied by ophiolite and supra-ophiolite detritus of the obducted Neotethyan Vardar unit. Structural cituation changed in the late Early Cretacoues, around 115 Ma (Albian). The entire TR underwent shortening. The unit, formerly the lower plate of the Neotethyan system, was emplaced, as the highest nappe, on to the other continental units of the Austroalpine system. Within the Eastern Alps, this was associated with intracontinental subduction initiated in zone of Permian magmatism having thermally weakened the lithosphere. The relationship of this subduction, and associated high to ultrahigh pressure metamorphism is not clear, but eventually could have connected to large-scale displacement of the Neotethyan subduction zone at its northernmost termination zone. The complete change of the TR, from lowermost position to upper plate, is the reflection of complex 3D geometry of overlapping oceanic domains and could happen in other Tethyan areas
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 19--20
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Tectono-sedimentary evolution of the junction area between the Western and Eastern Carpathian nappe systems (Ukrainian Carpathians)
Autorzy:
Hnylko, Oleh
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202114.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Carpathians
Ukraine
Tethys
Opis:
The Carpathians contain the remains of the Western Tethys, the main of which are: continental/microcontinental fragments (Alkapa and Tisza-Dacia terranes) of the Tethys Ocean, now located in the Central (Inner) Carpathians, and (palaeo)accretionary prisms, building mainly the Outer Carpathians. The Ukrainian Carpathians occupy the junction where the Western Carpathian and Eastern Carpathian nappe systems converged. In the presented work, author try to reconstruct the tectono-sedimentary evolution of the Eastern and Western Carpathian nappe systems in the junction area on the basis of own and published geomapping works, stratigraphic, sedimentological and structural research using existing restorations (see van Hinsbergen et al., 2020 and references therein). The Central Western Carpathian nappes (part of the Alcapa Terrane) are not exposed in Ukraine and probably buried under Neogene Transcarpathian Depression. The Central Eastern Carpathian nappes (part of the Tisza-Dacia Terraine) are represented in Ukraine by the Marmarosh thick-skinned basement nappes, that were formed in the Early Cretaceous time and overlapped by the latest Early Cretaceous–Paleogene post-nappe sedimentary cover. Between the Central Eastern and Central Western Carpathian nappe systems, the Pieniny Klippen Belt suture zone and Monastyrets Nappe filled with Paleogene flysch are developed. The structure of the junction between the Outer Eastern and Outer Western Carpathian nappe systems is more complicated. In Ukraine, the Outer Carpathians are made up of a several stacked nappes filled with Cretaceous–Neogene, mainly flysch sediments uprooted from their original substratum. In the Eastern Carpathian segment of Tethys at the Late Jurassic and/or Early Cretaceous, Ceahlau-Severin ocean (called Fore-Marmarosh one in Ukraine) was opened between the Dacia continental block (part of the Tisza-Dacia Terrane) and the Eurasian continent (van Hinsbergen et al., 2020 and references therein), that suggested by rift oceanic and continental basalts occurring under the Cretaceous flysch of the Outer Eastern Carpathian. Sinking of the Dacia (micro)continent into a subduction zone existed in the Neotethys ocean and inclined to the west (van Hinsbergen et al., 2020), could have caused the east-directed thrusting of the thick-skinned Marmarosh Nappes towards the CeahlauSeverin ocean. Ahead the Marmarosh nappe pile, the Eastern Carpathian Internal flysch thin-skinned nappes such as the Kamyanyi Potik, Rahiv, Burkut, Krasnoshora, Svydovets and Chornohora ones were formed. Coarsening upward and regular younging of the stratigraphic successions from inner to outer nappes suggest their attribution to the accretionary wedge growed in the Early Cretaceous–Paleogene time due to the subduction of the Outer Carpathian flysch basin basement under the Marmarosh pile. In the Western Carpathian segment, the Pieniny Klippen Belt accretionary wedge began to rise in the Late Cretaceous due to subduction of the Penninic oceanic domain under the Central Western Carpathians (part of the Alcapa Terrane) accompanied by detaching and grouping together originally very distant lithofacies (Plašienka, 2018 and references therein). The Western Carpathian Internal flysch nappes such as the Magura and Dukla units were attached to the Fore-Alcapa prism during the Middle Eocene–Oligocene, accordantly to outward shifting and uplifting of the trench-like Magura and Krosno lithofacies during this time. Closuring of the Monastyrets “between-terrainian” flysch basin at the late Eocene suggests the collision of the Alcapa and Tisza–Dacia terranes at the turn the Eocene and Oligocene. As a result, the Fore-Alcapa and Fore-Tisza-Dacia wedges were incorporated within an amalgamated internal wedge system that limited from the SW the Outer Carpathian basin. This unificated Menilite–Krosno basin was gradually uplifted and its deposits were subsequently thrusted as the external Silesian, Skyba and Boryslav-Pokyttya nappes onto the Miocene Carpathian Foredeep. Sedimentological and structural data suggest northeastward shift/migration of the wedge front–trench/foredeep– forebulge during Carpathian evolution. In addition, the junction of the Eastern and Western Carpathian accretionary wedges is complicated by strike-sleep movements.
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 25--26
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Palaeogeographic perturbations in the key-area between the Alpine Tethys and the Neotethys Realms during the time of tectonic overturns: Jurassic of the Alpine-Dinaric transition zone
Autorzy:
Rožič, Boštjan
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202118.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Tethys
Alpine
palaeogeography
Opis:
The major Mesozoic palaeogeographic disintegration of the present-day transitional area between the Alps and the Dinarides (Slovenia) occurred due to the Middle Triassic rifting event related with the opening of the Neotethys Ocean. By the Norian, three major palaeogeographic units were formed: the Dinaric (Adriatic, Friuli) Carbonate Platform (DCP) in the south, intermediate, E-W extending Slovenian Basin (SB) and the Julian Carbonate Platform (JCP) in the north. The platforms were characterized by a Dachstein type platform, while the basin was filled with hemiplegic and resedimented limestones, most of which are now dolomitized. To the west, there was a shallow water “bridge” between the two platforms. After the Triassic-Jurassic Boundary crisis, the palaeogeographic setting was preserved, but the margins of the platforms turned into ooidal factories. During the Early Jurassic, SB was almost exclusively filled with ooid calciturbidites from the north, which can be explained by the wind/leeward position of the basin with respect to the particular platform. The first rifting phase of the opening Alpine Tethys, generally dated to the earliest Jurassic, is poorly expressed in this area. The main products are limestone breccias that occur in the western part of the SB. In contrast, the second rifting phase (dated to the Pliensbachian in Slovenia) completely disintegrated JCP. The margins subsided first and were characterized by open shelf conditions with crinoid meadows, while the inner parts of the JCP remained shallow-marine. In the SB, the initial subsidence can be seen in the altered composition of the calciturbidites. Namely, the ooid/peloid dominated resediments changed to crinoid/ lithoclast dominated. In the Toarcian, sedimentation ended on most of the JCP, with only sporadic marls occurring at the margins. At the same time, the sedimentary environment of the DCP also deepened and nodular or crinoid limestone was deposited. The SB is characterized by uniform clay-rich sediments that vary greatly in thickness, indicative of differential subsidence caused by the second rifting phase. In the Middle Jurassic, shallow-water sedimentation re-established on the DCP, the margin being characterized again by ooidal shoals, the sedimentation of the SB gradually changed to siliceous limestone, while the JCP and the “bridge” between the JCP and DCP are characterized by non-sedimentation. The last important Jurassic change occurred during the Bajocian-Bathonian stages. Condensed Ammonitico Rosso-type limestone began to be deposited on the “bridge” and the JCP, while sedimentation in the SB changed to pure radiolarite. In the past, this was interpreted as a result of thermal subsidence associated with oceanization of the Alpine Tethys. However, studies in the last decade suggest a more complex tectonic evolution. Because the area in question lies between the opening Alpine Tethys to the west and the concurrent onset of subduction of the Neotethys to the east, it has been subject to strong differential subsidence between the largescale DCP and all units north of it. The exact nature of the tectonic deformation is not yet clear, but a transtensional regime is most probable. These events resulted in the disintegration and collapse of the northern DCP margin, as evidenced by the sedimentation of limestone breccia megabeds along the entire SB southern margin. These megabeds not only indicate enhanced tectonics, but also provide important information about the pre-Middle Jurassic architecture of the DCP margin, which is no longer preserved. They consist of very diverse limestone lithoclasts and an ooid packstone matrix. Analysis of the clasts revealed that the Late Triassic DCP margin was characterized by Dachstein-type reefs and the Early Jurassic by ooid shoals. In the interior of SB, these strata merge into ooid calciturbidites interlayered between radiolarite and become completely wedged in the northern part of the basin. Corresponding gravity-flow deposits also sedimented on the subsided “bridge” between the DCP and the JCP, and even on the northern margin of the DCP itself. An important difference is the simpler composition of the resediments in this area. Namely, they consist entirely of Middle Jurassic platform margin and slope lithoclasts. This is explained by the less pronounced palaeotopography between the active platform and submerged “bridge”, which did not allow erosion of the older platform limestone (as observed in SB). The described collapse of the DCP margin caused it to retreat, and marginal reefs formed over the underlying inner platform limestones in the Late Jurassic. The emersion phase in the Kimmeridgian ended reef growth and the margin turned back into ooid rich shoals. At the same time, the SB was characterized by continuous radiolarite sedimentation and drowned JCP together with the “bridge” with the Ammonitico rosso facies, characterized by several stratigraphic gaps. Rare calciturbidites are interbedded in areas near the DCP (southern SB and a drowned “bridge”). At the end of Jurassic, all areas north of the DCP show uniform sedimentation of the Biancone Limestone Formation.
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 60--61
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Early Triassic conodonts in Western Tethys
Autorzy:
Kolar-Jurkovšek, Tea
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202124.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Tethys
Triassic
biostratigraphy
Opis:
Conodonts are phosphatic, tooth-like elements of extinct jawless vertebrates that are classified in the independent class Conodonta. Due to their rapid evolution, wide palaeogeographic distribution and high resistance, conodonts are one of the most significant microfossil groups in the biostratigraphy of the Paleozoic and Triassic. Animals with conodonts were bilaterally symmetrical, exclusively marine organisms, where they inhabited a variety of habitats. These include both open sea habitats, whereas some species adapted to shallow habitats of epicontinental seas. For this reason, conodonts are extremely important for understanding of the palaeoecological and palaeogeographic conditions of the Paleozoic and Triassic. They were unquestionably one of the most successful animal groups, since they existed more than 300 million years and their elements are widely used as index fossils. Conodonts have shown their value for Triassic biostratigraphy. Based on international criteria the Permian-Triassic system boundary is defined with the first appearance of the conodont species Hindeodus parvus (Kozur & Pjatakova). The Permian-Triassic interval strata of the GSSP section in Meishan (China) are next to the platform-bearing gondolellids marked by the presence of Hindeodus-Isarcicella population that enabled to introduce also a conodont zonation for shallow facies. A standard conodont zonation is, except for the two lowermost Triassic zones, based on gondolellid genera that lived in deeper water: Clarkina, Sweetospathodus, Neospathodus, Novispathodus, Borinella, Scythogondolella, Icriospathodus, Triassospathodus and Chiosella. Certain Dienerian and Smithian strata of Western Tethys are marked by shallow water and euryhaline genera and due to the absence of global biozonation markers, a stratigraphic value of some genera (Hadrodontina, Pachycladina, Eurygnathodus, Foliella, Platyvillosus) is recognized. These shallow water genera were ecologically controlled (temperature, oxygen levels) that have been adapted to the epicontinental ramp environment and were particulary instrumental in forming the western part of the Tethyan province.
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 36--36
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Evolution of the Western Tethys as seen from the Western Carpathians’ perspective
Autorzy:
Plašienka, Dušan
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202134.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Tethys
Carpathians
evolution
Opis:
The palaeogeographic positions of the pre-Cretaceous Tethys “western ends” (Kovács, 1992) and their relationships to easterly located oceanic domains remain to belong to the most challenging issues in deciphering the structure and tectonic evolution of the European Alpides (e.g. Schmid et al., 2020). Due to the westward increasing paucity of direct indications of ancient oceanic domains and their discontinuous occurrences, a number of sometimes considerably different reconstructions have been proposed by several authors. All these are based on various data and authors’ preferences; therefore achievement of a widely accepted model seems not to be probable at present. In general, searching for evidences of former oceanic domains in the nappe edifice of collisional mountain belts, commonly in the suture zones, is based on several fundamental criteria: 1) ophiolite slivers and ophiolite-bearing mélanges as vestiges of consumed oceanic lithosphere; 2) blueschistto eclogite-facies metamorphosed units recording the subduction/exhumation processes within a subduction channel and/ or accretionary prism; 3) deep-marine synorogenic sedimentary complexes like wildflysch or olistostromes; 4) mixture of these in chaotic units within an accretionary wedge; and 5) a specific case of intraoceanic subduction resulting in ophiolite obduction, but this is not considered as a continental collisional tectonic setting. Indirectly, position of past oceanic basins can be detected by: a) secondary occurrences of an oceanic crust-derived detritus, including the heavy mineral spectra, in syn- to early post-orogenic sedimentary clastic formations and clues to their source areas; b) shelf-slope-continental rise facies polarity of former passive margins; c) progradational trend of collisional thrust stacking of the lower plate with a suture (often totally destroyed) in the uppermost structural position in the rear part of an orogenic pro-wedge; d) subduction-related calc-alkaline magmatism accompanying the active margin; e) upper plate back-arc extension, or retro-wedge thrusting opposite to the pro-wedge in a bivergent orogen with the suture in its axial zone; f) major crustal-scale discontinuities revealed by deep seismic sounding connected to surface fault zones separating palaeogeographically distinct domains indicating possible plate boundaries. All these potential clues have been considered while reconstructing the Mesozoic tectonic evolution of the Western Carpathians (Plašienka, 2018 and references therein). It should be noted that no single criterion characterized above, even not a few indirect signs are enough to define a particular orogenic zone or unit as an evidence for an oceanic suture. There is only one Western Carpathian zone which fulfils most of them. It is represented by units and rock complexes grouped in a tectonic superunit known as the Meliaticum and respective oceanic realm as the Meliata Ocean. The Meliata-related units bear clear signs of criteria 1, 2, 3, 4 and indirect indicators a, b, c and e. Whatever different are the interpretations of the Meliata Ocean origin (e.g. born as a back-arc basin initiated by the northward subduction of Palaeotethys, or simply as a northern margin or embayment of Neotethys), or even its existence as an independent domain (regarded as a facies zone only), all palaeotectonic interpretations of the Alpine tectonic evolution of the Western Carpathians have to take into account these pieces of evidence.
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 57--57
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Geochemistry of the Triassic–Jurassic lateritic bauxites of the Salt Range: implications for eastward extension of the Tethyan bauxite deposits into Pakistan
Autorzy:
Iqbal, Saqib
Bibi, Mehwish
Wagreich, Michael
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202138.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Pakistan
geochemistry
Tethys
Opis:
Bauxite deposits are residuals of intense lateritic weathering under warm and humid palaeoclimates. The Triassic– Jurassic Boundary (TJB) interval in the Salt Range, Pakistan, provides one such case of bauxite deposits formation along the SW tropical Neo-Tethyan passive margin. Thick, red bauxites/bauxitic clays occur at the contact of the Upper Triassic Kingriali Formation and the Lower Jurassic Datta Formation. These bauxites are rich in kaolinite, haematite, boehmite (Al2O3 and Fe2O3), and are depleted in silica (SiO2). Geochemical proxies of the succession signal intense chemical weathering of the parent siliciclastics under Mesozoic “greenhouse” conditions. Certain trace elements and Rare Earth Elements (REEs) are enriched up to seven times compared to mean Upper Continental Crust (UCC) values. These bauxites are synchronous with the Amir-Abad bauxites of the Alborz Mountains, central Iranian Plateau, that occur between the thick Triassic dolomite/dolomitic limestones of the Elika Formation and the Lower Jurassic Shemshak Formation. Thus, the Salt Range, Pakistan, provides evidence for the eastward extension of the Irano-Himalayan bauxites that are extended westward into Mediterranean bauxites, and the western Tethys by correlation with European bauxites. The TJB bauxites in the Salt Range support increased chemical weathering on the SW Neo-Tethyan passive margin and correspond to an associated sea-level fall during this time interval. This supports the Neo-Tethyan tectonics contribution in the formation of bauxite deposits during the Triassic–Jurassic in addition to the widely studied karst-bauxites that formed in response to the subduction and orogenic processes in the Paleo-Tethys.
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 30--30
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Sequence stratigraphy of the Upper Cretaceous–Eocene Belqa Group of Jordan (southern Tethys margin)
Autorzy:
Kalifi, Amir
Ardila-Sanchez, Maria
Messaoud, Jihede Hay
Laila, Wesam Abu
Buchem, Frans van
Ibrahim, Khalil
Powell, John
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202139.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Tethys
stratigraphy
Jordan
Opis:
The Belqa Group of Jordan (Upper Cretaceous–Eocene) contains a remarkable succession of sedimentary lithofacies, including chalk, sandstone, chert, phosphorite, oyster mounds and organic-rich marls deposited along the passive southern margin of the Neo-Tethys Ocean. The Belqa Group is now outcropping in spectacular wadis where they can be studied in detail. The exceptional outcrops exposures provide unique opportunities for studying three-dimensional spatial facies variations. However, this 3D facies distribution requires robust time control and the combination of modern sequence stratigraphic concepts and high-resolution dating methods. We report the establishment of a regional sequence stratigraphic model that provides the temporal framework for further detailed sedimentological, palaeontological and geochemical studies. Preliminary results show a stratigraphic organization in four major depositional sequences (3rd order), which are broadly in agreement with the lithostratigraphic formations. The age dating is based on new nano-fossil analyses and C/O and Sr isotope stratigraphy. A subdivision into higher-frequency sequences (4th/5th order) significatively improves the resolution of the stratigraphic framework and our understanding of spatio-temporal distribution of the sedimentary facies. The four sequences are: 1) The B1 sequence (Upper Coniacian-Santonian), characterized by a transgressive phase of chalk-rich sedimentation (coccolithophore-dominated) and a regressive phase of a prograding siliciclastics with a distal transition to the first phosphorite-chert facies. 2) The B2 sequence (Lower Campanian) also starts with a transgressive chalk dominated facies and subsequently develops into a chert-dominated marl facies (radiolarian-dominated). The chert is locally associated with thin phosphates and coquinas, as well as organic-matter rich facies in proximal marine settings. 3) The B3 sequence (Upper Campanian) is also characterized by a transgressive chalk dominated facies. The regressive phase is constituted by dm- to m-thick phosphorite beds that were deposited coevally with giant oyster banks (decameter scale). 4) The B4 sequence (Maastrichtian-Paleocene) represents a dramatic facies change to organic-rich pelagic marls, and can probably be further subdivided. This sedimentary succession highlights both gradual and rapid changes in biogenic productivity and geochemistry. These changes are punctuated and partly driven by significant relative sea-level changes, and likely also larger scale palaeoceanographical processes that are the focus of future work.
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 32--32
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Tracing palaeocurrents from the Arctic Realm into the Tethys Ocean: the use of glendonite as an indicator for cold bottom water masses
Autorzy:
Merkel, Anna
Munnecke, Alex
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202087.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Tethys
ocean
water
Opis:
Today, the global conveyor belt of ocean currents is controlled by the configuration of continents and the climate. Conversely, ocean currents influence water and air temperatures as well as the amount of rainfall on a regional to local scale. In addition, they govern species distribution patterns, sedimentation patterns and the dispersal of nutrients in both oceans and epeiric seas. Therefore, the reconstruction of palaeocurrents is crucial for the understanding of ancient environments and the past climate. An important driver for the global ocean circulation is the formation of deep water. However, deep-water production is difficult to estimate, and its circulation is difficult to reconstruct, not only today but especially in the geological record. Palaeocurrent reconstructions are often based on the temporal and spatial distribution of marine species. In this presentation, a new approach is proposed which uses the occurrence of glendonites as a proxy for cool bottom currents. Glendonites are pseudomorphs after the hydrous carbonate mineral ikaite (CaCO3·6H2O) which only forms in environments characterised by near-freezing temperatures. Throughout the Phanerozoic, glendonites can be found in successions which were deposited in high latitudes. However, examples of glendonite occurrences in mid-latitudinal sections are also reported. One of these examples are upper Pliensbachian (Lower Jurassic) glendonites from a shallow-marine succession in South Germany which was located in the European epicontinental sea  – an area, where it was technically too warm to form the precursor mineral ikaite. Based on petrographical and sedimentological investigations as well as stable isotope analyses it is concluded that a low temperature was the main factor for ikaite formation in the studied section. To explain the low water temperatures, a model for a thermohaline circulation in the European epicontinental sea is proposed. The cool climate in the late Pliensbachian initiated the growth of sea ice in high latitudes, leading to the formation of cold and saline bottom waters analogous to the modern formation of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) and Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW). The cold bottom current flowed southward from the Arctic Realm through the Viking Corridor into the European Epicontinental Sea, thereby causing a massive cooling of the deeper parts of the epeiric sea, which led to the formation of ikaite in temperate areas. After passing the shelf, the bottom current entered the Western Tethys, probably forming a deep water mass. The proposed model can help to explain mid-latitudinal glendonite occurrences not only in the Pliensbachian, but also in other areas and time slices which are characterised by cooling. Moreover, it enables the use of the pseudomorph as a tracer for cold bottom currents which can be a helpful tool for the reconstruction of global ocean current patterns.
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 49--49
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
A silicified wood from the Early Cretaceous sediments in the Kaligandaki Valley, west central Nepal
Autorzy:
Paudayal, Khum N.
Paudel, Lalu P.
Uhl, Dieter
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202093.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Tethys
Cretaceous
Nepal
Opis:
A silicified wood has been discovered from the Tethyan Cretaceous (Berriasian) deposits belonging to the Kagbeni Formation of north Central Nepal. The wood exhibits anatomical features which are well in accordance with Araucarioxylon nepalense described by Barale et al. (1976) from another locality in the Kagbeni Formation near Kagbeni in the Thakkhola Valley in Central Nepal. It is a pycnoxylic wood with mostly uniseriate and rarely biseriate bordered pits on radial tracheid walls. According to recent taxonomic opinions this type of wood should not be treated as Araucarioxylon, but as Agathoxylon Hartig. Thus we propose the name Agathoxylon nepalense comb. nov. for this type of wood. The sandstones of the Kagbeni Formation have been interpreted as delta-deposits, with a major flow direction from the south. This suggests that the wood originated from the northern margin of Indian sub-continent.
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 55--55
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Larger Benthic Foraminifera from Paleocene–Eocene carbonates, Eastern Tethys, Meghalaya NE India – their comparison with Western Tethys and palaeobiogeographical significance
Autorzy:
Tewari, Vinod Chandra
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24202096.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im. Stanisława Staszica w Krakowie. Wydawnictwo AGH
Tematy:
Tethys
India
Himalaya
Opis:
India–Asia plate collision and uplift of the Himalaya took place during Paleocene–Eocene time (50 Ma). The extension of western Tethys Sea from Europe to Asian eastern Tethyan region has been correlated by assemblages of Larger Benthic Foraminifera (LBF). Global correlation and paleobiogeography of the eastern Meghalayan and western Tethyan Sea is discussed on the basis of SBZ of Paleocene– Eocene foraminifera assemblages (Fig. 1). Paleocene–Eocene Lakadong Limestone and Umlatodoh Limestone were deposited in shallow marine carbonate ramp depositional environment in Shillong Plateau, Meghalaya, NE India. The sedimentation basin is part of the Eastern Tethys and LBF and calcareous algae is the major carbonate facies. Coral reefs are not developed in these carbonates in contrast with the western Tethys limestones in Adriatic Platform and western European –Alpine region (Tewari et al., 2007).The LBF and algal assemblage in both the limestones is consistent with other parts of Eastern Tethys in Eastern India and Tibet (Hottinger, 1971; Scheibner & Speijer, 2008, Tewari et al., 2010). The latest Paleocene (Biozone SBZ4) miscellanids and ranikothalids are replaced by Early Eocene alveolinids and nummulitids, which dominates LBF assemblages in the western Tethyan realm at the P-E boundary (Scheibner & Speijer, 2008), Thanetian (SBZ4 Biozone) is equivalent to Tethyan platform stage II (Scheibner & Speijer, 2008). In standard biozones Ilerdian (SBZ5-SBZ6), a general reorganization in LBF communities is recorded with a long life and low reproductive potential (Hottinger, 1971). However, in the Meghalayan LBF assemblages of the lowest Eocene (biozones SBZ5/6) are still dominated by Ranikothalia and Miscellanea, while new LBFs that first emerged within this time interval elsewhere (e.g. Assilina, Alveolina and Discocyclina) are less important and Nummulites are absent. Later, in the Early Eocene there was a gradual diversification of Discocyclina and Assilina species (Fig. 1), while Ranikothalia disappeared and Miscellanea became less important by the end of the SBZ5/6 biozones. Similar LBF assemblages have been recorded in other parts of east Tethys in western India and Tibet (Scheibner & Speijer 2008; Tewari et al., 2010 and references therein). Such LBF assemblages in east Tethys thus differ from west Tethys. Palaeobiogeographical barriers must have existed between India and Eurasia during early collision of Indian Plate with Eurasia Plate around 50 Ma (Tewari et al., 2010 and references therein). These barriers prevented migration of certain LBF species of Nummulites and Alveolina between these two palaeogeographic regions. LBF dominated facies in the other basins of Meghalaya like Umlatodoh Limestone are well developed in low latitude. However, mixed coral-algal reefs and LBF facies were sparse in low-mid latitude carbonate environments (Adriatic Platform of Italy-Slovenia, Oman, Egypt, Libya, NW Somalia; Tewari et al., 2007, 2010; Scheibner & Speijer, 2008 and references therin). In contrast to west Tethys, corals are absent in Eastern Tethys (calcareous algae is present in SBZ3 and SBZ4 Biozone, Fig. 1) in the Meghalaya and other low-latitude eastern Tethys (Scheibner & Speijer, 2008). Carbonate ramp (shallow tidal flat ) carbonate environments were dominated by LBFs from Early to Late Paleocene (SBZ4, SBZ5, biozones; Fig. 1). It is interpreted that the collision of the Indian and Asian plates must have generated this difference in palaeobiodiversity by creating barriers, which prevented migration of certain LBFs (Nummulites) from west to east. Later, in the Early Eocene (SBZ6, SBZ7-SBZ8 biozones), recorded from younger Umlatodoh Limestone in the upper part gradually replaced by LBF dominated facies in the east, with highly diversified LBF species of Nummulites, Discocyclina, Discocylina jauhrii etc.), indicating stable shallow marine environmental conditions. Stable carbon and oxygen isotope analyses from Paleocene–Eocene Lakadong Limestone and Umlatodoh Limestone strongly supports a shallow marine carbonate platform deposition in Eastern Shallow Tethys, Meghalaya, India (Tewari et al., 2010)
Źródło:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka; 2023, 1-2 (72-73); 71--72
1731-0830
Pojawia się w:
Geotourism / Geoturystyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł

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