New fossiliferous sites from the mid-Cretaceous Tendrara dome (High Plateaus, Morocco): biostratigraphical, paleoenvironmental and paleogeographical implications
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Sedimentological and stratigraphical studies in the Cretaceous series of the Tendrara dome led to the discovery of fossiliferous levels in the pre-Cenomanian and Cenomanian deposits, providing significant biostratigraphic, paleoenvironmental, and paleogeographic results. In the SW part of the Tendrara dome, the predominantly terrigenous deposits at the base of the pre-Cenomanian (Dekkar 1 Formation) yielded dinosaur eggshell fragments and charophytes, in particular Clavatoraceans, pointing to the Barremian-Aptian. Above this unit, two beds with fish remains were discovered in the Dekkar 2 Formation and at the base of the Dekkar 3 Formation, respectively. To the NE of the Tendrara dome, a fossiliferous site with diversified benthic fauna and abundant fish remains was discovered in a thin marly unit unconformably overlying the Middle Jurassic basement. Elasmobranch micro-remains indicate a Cenomanian age for this unit. The SW-NE correlations indicate a marked thickness reduction and lateral facies variations, implying a strong asymmetry in the Cretaceous paleogeography of the dome. The first continental and lagoonal basins of the Barremian-Aptian and Albian?-Cenomanian are located in the southern part of the Tendrara dome. The Cenomanian transgression, initiated from the south, gradually covered the dome, depositing reduced coastal plain elasmobranch-rich facies in its northern part. The Tendrara dome constituted a paleogeographic barrier, limiting the first transgressions of the Cenomanian sea. This paleostructure is part of an emerged area (Idrissides High) located between the Tethyan Ocean and the Saharan epicontinental sea.
期刊介绍:
Cretaceous Research provides a forum for the rapid publication of research on all aspects of the Cretaceous Period, including its boundaries with the Jurassic and Palaeogene. Authoritative papers reporting detailed investigations of Cretaceous stratigraphy and palaeontology, studies of regional geology, and reviews of recently published books are complemented by short communications of significant new findings.
Papers submitted to Cretaceous Research should place the research in a broad context, with emphasis placed towards our better understanding of the Cretaceous, that are therefore of interest to the diverse, international readership of the journal. Full length papers that focus solely on a local theme or area will not be accepted for publication; authors of short communications are encouraged to discuss how their findings are of relevance to the Cretaceous on a broad scale.
Research Areas include:
• Regional geology
• Stratigraphy and palaeontology
• Palaeobiology
• Palaeobiogeography
• Palaeoceanography
• Palaeoclimatology
• Evolutionary Palaeoecology
• Geochronology
• Global events.