An enigmatic kilometer-scale concentration of small mytilids (Late Miocene, Guadalquivir Basin, S Spain)
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Aguirre Rodríguez, Julio; Braga Alarcón, Juan Carlos; Martín Martín, José Manuel; Puga Bernabeu, Ángel; Pérez Asensio, José Noel; Sánchez-Almazo, Isabel M.; Génio, LucianaEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Cold seep Heterozoan carbonates Mussels
Fecha
2015-07-17Referencia bibliográfica
Publisher version: Aguirre, J., Braga, J., Martín, J., Puga-Bernabéu, Á., Pérez-Asensio, J., Sánchez-Almazo, I., & Génio, L. (2015). An enigmatic kilometer-scale concentration of small mytilids (Late Miocene, Guadalquivir Basin, S Spain). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology Volume 436, 15 October 2015, Pages 199-213. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2015.07.015
Resumen
Upper Miocene heterozoan carbonates crop out extensively in a NE–SW-trending belt (42 km long and 1.5–8 km
wide) along the so-called El Alcor topographic high, from Carmona to Dos Hermanas (Seville, S Spain). These carbonates
formed at the southern active margin of the Guadalquivir Basin, the foreland basin of the Betic Cordillera.
They change to marls basinward (NE) and to sands landward (SE and SW). Therefore, carbonate production was
constrained to a limited area in an otherwise siliciclastic shelf. The carbonates (up to 40 m thick) overlie a gradually
coarsening-upward succession of marls followed by silts and sandstones. The carbonate sequence can be
divided into three subunits corresponding, frombottom to top, to lowstand, transgressive, and highstand system
tract deposits. The lower subunit, exhibiting extensive trough cross-bedding, is interpreted as a shallow-water
bar deposit. The intermediate subunit onlaps underlying sediments and was deposited in deeper, lowturbulence
conditions. The upper subunit deposits accumulated in a well-oxygenated outer platform based on
benthic foraminiferal assemblages. The presence of hummocky and swaley cross-stratification in these latter deposits
suggests that theywere affected by storms. Pervasive fluid-escape structures are also observed throughout
the carbonates.
The three subunits consist of bioclastic packstones to rudstonesmade up of abundant fragments of smallmytilids.
Isotopic data from serpulid polychaete Ditrupa tubes show 13C-depleted values (up to −16.1‰), whereas δ18O
yields normal marine values. Additional isotopic data on shells of scallops, oysters, and small mussels, as well
as bulk sediment, show diagenetic alterations. Based on actualistic examples of massive concentrations of mussels,
the nearly monospecific composition of the El Alcor deposits, together with negative δ13C values of Ditrupa
tubes, indicates that cold seeps presumably promoted carbonate formation. However, the absence of typical features
of cold-seep deposits, such as authigenic carbonatesmediated by anaerobic bacterial activity and the typical
chemosynthetic shelly organisms, makes the large carbonate body of El Alcor an unusual cold-seep deposit.





