TIDE-DOMINATED DELTAS RESPONDING TO HIGH-FREQUENCY SEA-LEVEL CHANGES, PRE-MESSINIAN RIFIAN CORRIDOR, MOROCCO

被引:4
|
作者
Beelen, Daan [1 ]
Wood, Lesli [1 ]
Zaghloul, Mohamed Najib [2 ]
Haissen, Faouziya [3 ]
Arts, Michiel [4 ]
Ouahbi, Ismail [5 ]
Redouane, Meryem [3 ]
Cardona, Sebastian [1 ]
机构
[1] Colorado Sch Mines, Dept Geol & Geol Engn, SAnD Consortium, 1500 Illinois St, Golden, CO 80401 USA
[2] Univ Abdelmalek Essaadi, Fac Sci & Tech, POB 416, Tanger 90000, Morocco
[3] Univ Hassan II Casablanca, Fac Sci Ben Msik, Dept Geol, BP 7955, Casablanca, Morocco
[4] Univ Liege, Fac Sci, Dept Geol Sedimentary Petrol, Allee Six Aout 12,B20, B-4000 Liege, Belgium
[5] Off Natl Hydrocarbures & Mines ONHYM, Dept Petr Explorat, 34 Ave Al Fadila, Rabat, Morocco
关键词
ISOTOPE STRATIGRAPHY; SEDIMENTARY DYNAMICS; SALINITY CRISIS; MIOCENE; BASIN; ATLANTIC; MARINE; STRAIT; FACIES; CHRONOLOGY;
D O I
10.2110/jsr.2020.010
中图分类号
P5 [地质学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 081803 ;
摘要
The Rifian Corridor was an ancient sea strait that connected the Mediterranean Sea with the Atlantic Ocean during the Miocene. Key outcrop exposures of this corridor's sedimentary fill are exposed at the Ben Allou, El Adergha, and Driouate localities, in the Fez-Meknes region, Morocco. These display cyclic successions that formed immediately before the disappearance of the Rifian Corridor, and the associated isolation and desiccation of the Mediterranean Sea. Sedimentary cycles at Ben Allou consist of: facies 1, Organic-matter-bearing blue claystones; facies 2, gray marlstones intercalated with turbidites; and facies 3, yellow-brown, coarse-grained calcarenites. Based on their coarse grain size, presence of reactivation surfaces, bidirectional current structures, and mud drapes as well as microfossil, macrofossil and trace fossil assemblages, we interpret the calcarenites (facies 3) as prograding, strait-adjacent tide-dominated deltas transitioning from large subtidal compound dunes to intertidal sand sheets that are composed mostly of authigenic carbonate sediment. The two fine-grained facies were deposited in deeper prodelta (facies 2) and shelfal (facies 1) environments, as shown by our combined sedimentological and paleontological evidence. Cross-sectional channel geometries provide a means for reconstructing the delta's paleo-tidal range, suggesting that it was macrotidal, and likely amplified by the paleogeometry of the Southern Rifian Corridor, to at least 4.2 m. The cyclic succession of corridor fill exposed here likely is the result of three, roughly 70 m fluctuations of eustatic rise and subsequent fall, possibly linked to similar to 100,000-year glacial-interglacial climate fluctuations. Broadly similar, contemporaneous sedimentary successions from the outcrop at El Adergha, 40 km east of Ben Allou, show that these sea-level variations affected a wide range of the Corridor, while rocks at the locality of Driouate, 9 km south of Ben Allou, show evidence for lagoonal environments on the landward side of the corridor, which were subject to periodic marine regressions and floodings. These results are reinterpretations of previous work on these sediments, with implications for depositional processes in the Rifian Corridor, Miocene paleoclimate, and the Messinian salinity crisis.
引用
收藏
页码:1642 / 1666
页数:25
相关论文
共 22 条
  • [1] TIDE-DOMINATED DELTAS RESPONDING TO HIGH-FREQUENCY SEA-LEVEL CHANGES, PRE-MESSINIAN RIFIAN CORRIDOR, MOROCCO: REPLY
    Beelen, Daan
    Wood, Lesli
    Zaghloul, Mohamed Najib
    Haissen, Faouziya
    Arts, Michiel
    Ouahbi, Ismail
    Redouane, Meryem
    Cardona, Sebastian
    JOURNAL OF SEDIMENTARY RESEARCH, 2021, 91 (08) : 880 - 886
  • [2] TIDE-DOMINATED DELTAS RESPONDING TO HIGH-FREQUENCY SEA-LEVEL CHANGES, PRE-MESSINIAN RIFIAN CORRIDOR, MOROCCO: DISCUSSION
    de Weger, Wouter
    Chiarella, Domenico
    Rodriguez Tovar, Francisco J.
    Sierro, Francisco J.
    Miguez-Salas, Olmo
    Amine Manar, M.
    Hernandez-Molina, F. Javier
    JOURNAL OF SEDIMENTARY RESEARCH, 2021, 91 (08) : 876 - 879
  • [3] Tide-dominated deltas responding to high-frequency sea-level changes, premessinian rifian corridor, Morocco
    Beelen D.
    Wood L.
    Zaghloul M.N.
    Haissen F.
    Arts M.
    Ouahbi I.
    Redouane M.
    Cardona S.
    Beelen, Daan (dbeelen@mines.edu), 1642, SEPM Society for Sedimentary Geology (90): : 1642 - 1666
  • [4] ARE UPPER CRETACEOUS HIGH-FREQUENCY RELATIVE SEA-LEVEL CHANGES TECTONIC
    MALARTRE, F
    FERRY, S
    COMPTES RENDUS DE L ACADEMIE DES SCIENCES SERIE II, 1995, 320 (05): : 427 - 432
  • [5] Modeling carbonate microfacies in the context of high-frequency dynamic relative sea-level and environmental changes
    Spence, GH
    Tucker, ME
    JOURNAL OF SEDIMENTARY RESEARCH, 1999, 69 (04): : 947 - 961
  • [6] Modeling carbonate microfacies in the context of high-frequency dynamic relative sea-level and environmental changes - Reply
    Spence, GH
    Tucker, ME
    JOURNAL OF SEDIMENTARY RESEARCH, 2000, 70 (06): : 1335 - 1336
  • [7] Shallow stratigraphy and sedimentation history during high-frequency sea-level changes on the central California shelf
    Grossman, E. E.
    Eittreim, S. L.
    Field, M. E.
    Wong, F. L.
    CONTINENTAL SHELF RESEARCH, 2006, 26 (10) : 1217 - 1239
  • [8] Modeling carbonate microfacies in the context of high-frequency dynamic relative sea-level and environmental changes - Discussion
    Steinhauff, DM
    JOURNAL OF SEDIMENTARY RESEARCH, 2000, 70 (06): : 1333 - 1334
  • [9] REEF GEOMETRIES, EROSION SURFACES AND HIGH-FREQUENCY SEA-LEVEL CHANGES, UPPER MIOCENE REEF COMPLEX, MALLORCA, SPAIN
    POMAR, L
    SEDIMENTOLOGY, 1991, 38 (02) : 243 - 269
  • [10] High-frequency sea-level changes recorded in deep-water carbonates of the Upper Cretaceous Dol Formation (island of Brac, Croatia)
    Buckovic, Damir
    Martinus, Maja
    Kukoc, Duje
    Tesovic, Blanka Cvetko
    Gusic, Ivan
    GEOLOGICA CARPATHICA, 2010, 61 (01) : 29 - 38