Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8916199 Cretaceous Research 2018 32 Pages PDF
Abstract
This work provides a new ammonite age-calibration of the rudistid limestones of the Urgonian-type Provence carbonate platform (Southeast France) based on sampling along three ∼200 km-long platform-to-basin transects and re-examination of historical collections. Ammonite key findings indicate that the first rudistid platform stage (including the Agriopleura and requieniid-monopleurid beds) develops and spreads northward through the Toxancyloceras vandenheckii-Gerhardtia sartousiana zones interval (lower upper Barremian). This stage is interrupted by the tectonically-induced deepening of the southern Provence domain during the Imerites giraudi Zone while the northern regions records the massive deposition of Palorbitolina-Heteraster beds. Recovery of the rudistid carbonate system is illustrated by the development of caprinid-bearing rudistid limestones in the North Provence domain through the Martelites sarasini Subzone (lower Martelites sarasini Zone, uppermost Barremian), which shows a bidirectional progradation toward the South Provence and Vocontian basins. The caprinid-bearing limestones terminate at a short-term exposure and are overlain by cherty-oobioclastic deposits spanning the Pseudocrioceras waagenoides Subzone (upper M. sarasini Zone) to the lower Deshayesites forbesi Zone. A regional-wide flooding of the study area is illustrated by the abrupt change to a marl-dominated regime occurring in the upper D. forbesi Zone. Compared to the previous datings, the Barremian/Aptian boundary should be relocated in the lower part of the post-caprinid, cherty-oobioclastic deposits although its precise level cannot be fixed due to the lack of a continuous ammonite record. Ammonite age-calibration of the surrounding Urgonian rudistid platform series is discussed and gives evidence of a comparable twofold demise of the peri-Vocontian rudistid biota during the uppermost Barremian. Accordingly, the link between the final demise of the peri-Vocontian rudistid biota and the onset and/or culmination of the mid-early Aptian Oceanic Anoxic Event (OAE) 1a should be reconsidered.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Palaeontology
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