{"title":"北海岩心中菊石的赋存:侏罗纪北极-地中海海路连通性的意义","authors":"N. Morton, V. Mitta, J. Underhill","doi":"10.1144/sjg2019-030","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The paucity of ammonite recovery from North Sea wells has meant that offshore correlations are largely dependent upon microfossil assemblages. While rare, ammonites have been found in a few boreholes during the course of oil exploration activities. The occurrence of ammonites in ten wells in the UK sector of the Viking Graben and the Moray Firth rift arms provides a new basis by which to demonstrate that there was a distinct separation between Arctic and sub-Mediterranean species that lasted from Bajocian to Early Callovian times. Five wells contain ‘Boreal Bathonian' ammonites from the Arctic Realm. Arctocephalites from the Boreal Arcticus Zone (uppermost Bajocian) correlates basinal partly anoxic mudstones in the Beryl Embayment (9/13b) with both bioturbated siltstones in the southern Viking Graben (9/10b), and calcareous mudstones in the East Shetland Basin (211/21). Upper Bajocian Pompeckji Zone Cranocephalites and younger Arcticoceras from Lower to Middle Bathonian Greenlandicus, Ishmae and Cranocephaloide zones are confined to 211/21 demonstrating that the marine transgression began earlier and lasted longer. A Cadoceras from well 3/3-8 dates to the Lower Callovian Koenigi and Calloviense zones during which renewed extensional faulting re-established ammonite migration routes between the Boreal and sub-Mediterranean realms. A Middle Oxfordian (Densiplicatum Zone) Perisphinctes from well 22/5b-8 confirms an episode of northward migration from the sub-Mediterranean into the Boreal Realm. Upper Oxfordian (Regulare to Rosenkantzi zones) Amoeboceras in wells 211/21-1 and 9/13b-19 are close to Upper Bajocian/Lower Bathonian faunas, suggesting an absence of Upper Bathonian to Middle Oxfordian strata as a result of rift-related footwall uplift and erosion. In four wells from Block 15/21 (-4, -11, -12A and -25) Lower Kimmeridgian ammonites have been documented, including Rasenia, Amoebites, Aulacostephanoides and Zenostephanoides, from the Baylei (?), Cymodoce, Mutabilis and Eudoxus zones, the latter (confirmed at well 13/28b-8) dating a widespread regional marine flooding surface in the Inner Moray Firth. Supplementary material: The detailed measurements of dimensions of the ammonites described are available at: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5087313","PeriodicalId":49556,"journal":{"name":"Scottish Journal of Geology","volume":"56 1","pages":"175 - 195"},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2020-08-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1144/sjg2019-030","citationCount":"3","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Ammonite occurrences in North Sea cores: implications for Jurassic Arctic–Mediterranean marine seaway connectivity\",\"authors\":\"N. Morton, V. Mitta, J. Underhill\",\"doi\":\"10.1144/sjg2019-030\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The paucity of ammonite recovery from North Sea wells has meant that offshore correlations are largely dependent upon microfossil assemblages. While rare, ammonites have been found in a few boreholes during the course of oil exploration activities. The occurrence of ammonites in ten wells in the UK sector of the Viking Graben and the Moray Firth rift arms provides a new basis by which to demonstrate that there was a distinct separation between Arctic and sub-Mediterranean species that lasted from Bajocian to Early Callovian times. Five wells contain ‘Boreal Bathonian' ammonites from the Arctic Realm. Arctocephalites from the Boreal Arcticus Zone (uppermost Bajocian) correlates basinal partly anoxic mudstones in the Beryl Embayment (9/13b) with both bioturbated siltstones in the southern Viking Graben (9/10b), and calcareous mudstones in the East Shetland Basin (211/21). Upper Bajocian Pompeckji Zone Cranocephalites and younger Arcticoceras from Lower to Middle Bathonian Greenlandicus, Ishmae and Cranocephaloide zones are confined to 211/21 demonstrating that the marine transgression began earlier and lasted longer. A Cadoceras from well 3/3-8 dates to the Lower Callovian Koenigi and Calloviense zones during which renewed extensional faulting re-established ammonite migration routes between the Boreal and sub-Mediterranean realms. A Middle Oxfordian (Densiplicatum Zone) Perisphinctes from well 22/5b-8 confirms an episode of northward migration from the sub-Mediterranean into the Boreal Realm. Upper Oxfordian (Regulare to Rosenkantzi zones) Amoeboceras in wells 211/21-1 and 9/13b-19 are close to Upper Bajocian/Lower Bathonian faunas, suggesting an absence of Upper Bathonian to Middle Oxfordian strata as a result of rift-related footwall uplift and erosion. 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Ammonite occurrences in North Sea cores: implications for Jurassic Arctic–Mediterranean marine seaway connectivity
The paucity of ammonite recovery from North Sea wells has meant that offshore correlations are largely dependent upon microfossil assemblages. While rare, ammonites have been found in a few boreholes during the course of oil exploration activities. The occurrence of ammonites in ten wells in the UK sector of the Viking Graben and the Moray Firth rift arms provides a new basis by which to demonstrate that there was a distinct separation between Arctic and sub-Mediterranean species that lasted from Bajocian to Early Callovian times. Five wells contain ‘Boreal Bathonian' ammonites from the Arctic Realm. Arctocephalites from the Boreal Arcticus Zone (uppermost Bajocian) correlates basinal partly anoxic mudstones in the Beryl Embayment (9/13b) with both bioturbated siltstones in the southern Viking Graben (9/10b), and calcareous mudstones in the East Shetland Basin (211/21). Upper Bajocian Pompeckji Zone Cranocephalites and younger Arcticoceras from Lower to Middle Bathonian Greenlandicus, Ishmae and Cranocephaloide zones are confined to 211/21 demonstrating that the marine transgression began earlier and lasted longer. A Cadoceras from well 3/3-8 dates to the Lower Callovian Koenigi and Calloviense zones during which renewed extensional faulting re-established ammonite migration routes between the Boreal and sub-Mediterranean realms. A Middle Oxfordian (Densiplicatum Zone) Perisphinctes from well 22/5b-8 confirms an episode of northward migration from the sub-Mediterranean into the Boreal Realm. Upper Oxfordian (Regulare to Rosenkantzi zones) Amoeboceras in wells 211/21-1 and 9/13b-19 are close to Upper Bajocian/Lower Bathonian faunas, suggesting an absence of Upper Bathonian to Middle Oxfordian strata as a result of rift-related footwall uplift and erosion. In four wells from Block 15/21 (-4, -11, -12A and -25) Lower Kimmeridgian ammonites have been documented, including Rasenia, Amoebites, Aulacostephanoides and Zenostephanoides, from the Baylei (?), Cymodoce, Mutabilis and Eudoxus zones, the latter (confirmed at well 13/28b-8) dating a widespread regional marine flooding surface in the Inner Moray Firth. Supplementary material: The detailed measurements of dimensions of the ammonites described are available at: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5087313
期刊介绍:
Although published only since 1965, the Scottish Journal of Geology has a long pedigree. It is the joint publication of the Geological Society of Glasgow and the Edinburgh Geological Society, which prior to 1965 published separate Transactions: from 1860 in the case of Glasgow and 1863 for Edinburgh.
Traditionally, the Journal has acted as the focus for papers on all aspects of Scottish geology and its contiguous areas, including the surrounding seas. The publication policy has always been outward looking, with the Editors encouraging review papers and papers on broader aspects of the Earth sciences that cannot be discussed solely in terms of Scottish geology.
The diverse geology of Scotland continues to provide an important natural laboratory for the study of earth sciences; many seminal studies in geology have been carried out on Scottish rocks, and over the years the results of much of this work had been published in the Journal and its predecessors.
The Journal fully deserves its high reputation worldwide and intends to maintain its status in the front rank of publications in the Earth sciences.