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García-Hidalgo & Gil-Gil, 2024

Firmgrounds and hardgrounds in the Coniacian carbonate platform of the Iberian basin: Origin and model for development of omission surfaces in tidal environments

García-Hidalgo, J. F., Gil-Gil, J.
DOI
DOI10.1016/j.sedgeo.2024.106713
Year2024
JournalSedimentary Geology
Volume470
Pages106713
Typearticle in journal
LanguageEnglish
Id51228

Abstract

Distinctive erosional and omission surfaces occur at several stratigraphic levels in the tidal carbonates of the 3rdorder Coniacian sequence (Iberian Basin). They are ancient analogs of omission surfaces developed on lithified carbonates in subaerial and coastal settings. Omission surfaces consist of (i) firmground Glossifungites ichnofacies (Balanoglossites-Thalassinoides); and (ii) hardground Trypanites ichnofacies (scalloped and planar surfaces and Gastrochaenolites-Entobia surfaces). Firmgrounds are also related to erosion or ferruginous crusts. Hardground surfaces are related to bioerosion, dissolution and physical erosion. Grain size and textural features in Balanoglossites and Thalassinoides firmground surfaces are essentially the same, suggesting that even bathymetry could be similar. Several stages in hardgrounds consist of different, scalloped or planar surfaces related to bioerosion, dissolution and physical erosion. Gastrochaenolites-Entobia borers represent a major change in the trace fossil associations and imply different processes in their origin, being originated at slightly different depths with Gastrochaenolites representing shallower environments. The studied field sections display a cyclicity on the scale of meters that tentatively reflects the presence of 4th-order parasequence sets. Two kinds of sedimentary discontinuities have been used for correlation: omission surfaces and ferruginous crusts representing regional sea level falls and rises. Part of the described surfaces does not appear to have been previously recognized in older carbonate deposits. Their common presence of similar surfaces along modern coasts and in karst terrains, as well as their abundance in the Coniacian sequence, suggests that they might also be abundant in the geologic record in other sedimentary basins for defining palaeoshorelines.

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