Middle Jurassic limestone megabreccia from the southern margin of the Slovenian Basin
Autor: | Astrid Švara, Teja Fabjan, David Gerčar, Tomislav Popit, Dragica Turnšek, Jan Udovč, Lara Kunst, Primož Oprčkal, Tea Kolar-Jurkovšek, Boštjan Rožič, Luka Gale |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
010506 paleontology
geography Plateau geography.geographical_feature_category Subduction Carbonate platform Geochemistry Geology 010502 geochemistry & geophysics Ophiolite 01 natural sciences Obduction Sedimentary depositional environment Sedimentary rock Mesozoic 0105 earth and related environmental sciences |
Zdroj: | Swiss Journal of Geosciences. 112:163-180 |
ISSN: | 1661-8734 1661-8726 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00015-018-0320-9 |
Popis: | The Slovenian Basin is a Mesozoic deep-water paleogeographic unit, located along the border between the eastern Southern Alps and the Dinarides, that records geodynamic signals from the opening of both the Piedmont-Liguria and the Neotethys oceanic domains. In the Middle Jurassic, it was bordered by the Dinaric (Adriatic) Carbonate Platform to the south and the Julian High submarine plateau to the north. The southern margin of the basin is characterized by a several tens of meters thick sedimentary sequence of Bajocian-Bathonian (Callovian?) age that is dominated by limestone megabreccia shed from the Dinaric Carbonate Platform, sedimented by debris-flows in a toe-of-slope sedimentary environment. It is accompanied by rud/grain/packstone beds sedimented via (high-density) turbidity-flows. This megabreccia unit represents the proximal equivalent of the lower resedimented limestones of the Tolmin Formation. The matrix within lithoclasts indicates resedimentation from ooidal shoals and the erosion of basinal and slope sediments. Lithoclasts are of Norian to Lower Jurassic age, and originated from (A) platform margin carbonates, i.e. Triassic marginal reef and Lower Jurassic sand-shoal limestones, (B) deep open-shelf or slope coarse bioclastic limestones, and (C) older basinal rocks. The lithoclast analysis enables the reconstruction of the platform-basin transitional zone that is not preserved (exposed) due to overthrusting. The limestone megabreccia indicates enhanced tectonic activity causing repeated collapse of the platform margin, probably connected to the initiation of intraoceanic subduction within Neotethys followed by ophiolite obduction onto the eastern distal margin of the Adria. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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