Palaeoenvironmental and palaeoecological change on the northern Tethyan carbonate platform during the Late Barremian to earliest Aptian |
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Authors: | MELODY STEIN ANNIE ARNAUD‐VANNEAU THIERRY ADATTE DOMINIK FLEITMANN JORGE E. SPANGENBERG KARL B. FÖLLMI |
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Affiliation: | 1. Institut de Géologie et Paléontologie, Université de Lausanne, Anthrop?le, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland (E‐mail: melody.stein@unil.ch);2. Institut Dolomieu, Université Joseph Fourrier, 15 rue Maurice Gignoux, 38031 Grenoble, France;3. Institute of Geological Sciences, University of Bern, Baltzerstrasse 1‐3, 3012 Bern, Switzerland;4. Institut de Minéralogie et Géochimie, Université de Lausanne, Anthrop?le, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
Associate Editor – Adrian Immenhauser |
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Abstract: | A major shift from Urgonian oligotrophic carbonate accumulation to orbitolinid‐rich mixed siliciclastic–carbonate deposition is observed near the Barremian–Aptian boundary in many sections both within and outside the shallow‐marine Tethyan Realm. This important facies change in the Swiss Helvetic Alps is documented here and interpreted in the context of general palaeoenvironmental change. To achieve this, a detailed micropalaeontological, sedimentological, mineralogical and geochemical study has been carried out on six sections across the upper part of the lower Schrattenkalk Member (Late Barremian), the Rawil Member (formerly ‘Lower Orbitolina Beds’, earliest Aptian) and the lowermost part of the upper Schrattenkalk Member (Early Aptian). The sediments of the Rawil Member exhibit inner‐platform facies with rudists, miliolids, orbitolinids and dasycladals to outer‐platform facies characterized by small benthic foraminifera, orbitolinids, crinoids and bryozoans. Stratigraphic trends in microfacies environments and the composition of microfossil assemblages, indicate that the Rawil Member includes a transgressive systems tract and the base of a highstand systems tract which are composed of an increasing number of parasequences in distal directions (five to nine in the sections studied here). The sea‐level rise discerned in the Rawil Member is coeval with increased detrital input and phosphorus burial, with maximum values up to 80 times and 21 times the background values in the subjacent part of the lower Schrattenkalk Member, respectively. Furthermore, the Rawil Member records the appearance of kaolinite, indicating a change towards tropical and more humid climate conditions. This change may have led to an increase in continental weathering rates and an associated increase in detrital and nutrient fluxes towards the ocean. The phase of climate change observed near the Barremian–Aptian boundary may have been triggered by a phase of intensified volcanic activity linked with the onset of the Ontong Java large igneous province and the Rawil Member may be the expression of a precursor episode to Oceanic Anoxic Event 1a in the shallow‐marine environment. |
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Keywords: | Aptian Barremian carbon isotopes carbonate platform clay mineralogy Cretaceous Helvetic Alps microfacies Orbitolinids phosphorus |
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