Trough cross-bedded rhodolith limestones in the Atlantic-linked Ronda Basin (Messinian, Southern Spain)
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Show full item recordEditorial
Frontiers
Materia
Fossil coralline algae Storm deposits Littoral wedge Paleobiogeography Late Miocene
Date
2022-09-02Referencia bibliográfica
Braga JC and Aguirre J (2022), Trough cross-bedded rhodolith limestones in the Atlantic-linked Ronda Basin (Messinian, Southern Spain). Front. Earth Sci. 10:957780. doi: [10.3389/feart.2022.957780]
Sponsorship
Spanish Government PGC 2018-099391-B-I00Abstract
Rhodolith limestones occur in the upper part of the Miocene infill of the Ronda
Basin in southern Spain. This basin was an embayment at the southern margin of
the Atlantic-linked Guadalquivir Basin, the foreland basin of the Betic Cordillera.
Messinian rhodolith limestones crop out in the mesa of the Roman settlement
Acinipo. They mostly consist of trough cross-bedded rhodolith rudstones,
which change basinward to large-scale planar cross-bedded rhodolith
rudstones, which in turn pass laterally to planar cross-bedded and flatbedded
bryozoan rudstones. Rhodoliths in rudstones are generally broken,
exhibiting several phases of breakage and restarted growth of coralline algae.
Many rhodoliths also show asymmetrical growth. The rudstone matrix is a
packstone with fragments of coralline algae, bryozoans, calcitic bivalves,
echinoids, and foraminifers. Large lithoclasts from the basement, heavily
bored by bivalves, are common in the rhodolith rudstone, especially in the
most massive type. Rhodolith characteristics and sedimentary structures
suggest that trough cross-bedded rhodolith rudstones accumulated in
submarine dunes moved by storm surges in a littoral wedge at the western
side of a small bay (the Ruinas de Acinipo bay) in the Ronda Basin. Large-scale
planar cross-bedded coralline algal and bryozoan rudstones formed in the
foresets of the wedge progradation below the storm-wave base. The
dominance of Lithophyllaceae and Hapalidiales, with scarce representatives
of Corallinaceae in the coralline algal assemblages, reflects that Ronda and
Guadalquivir basins opened to the Atlantic Ocean.