Linked evolution of Paleocene sea floor relief and deep marine currents in the Subbetic Zone, southern Spain
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Pujalte, Victoriano; Payros, Aitor; Rodríguez Tovar, Francisco J.; Orue Etxebarria, Xabier; Martínez Braceras, NaroaEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Microcodium Deep sea sediments Turbidites
Fecha
2024-04-18Referencia bibliográfica
V. Pujalte, A. Payros, F.J. Rodríguez-Tovar et al. Sedimentary Geology 466 (2024) 106648 [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sedgeo.2024.106648]
Patrocinador
Project PID2019-105670GB-I00/AEI/10.13039/ 501100011033 (Agencia Estatal de Investigación,Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades, Spain); Projects TED2021-131697B-C22 and PID2019-104625RB-100 (MCIN/AEI/ 10.13039/501100011033); Grant P18-RT-4074 (FEDER/Junta de Andalucía); Research Group RNM-178 (Junta de Andalucía). NM-B is grateful for a Margarita Salas contract (MARSA22/05) of the Spanish Government with Next Generation funds from the European UnionResumen
Paleocene deposits of the Subbetic Zone (southern Spain) provide outstanding evidence of the influence of sea
mountains on deep marine currents. This part of the Betic Cordillera External Zones corresponds to the distal
and deepest area of the original basin, where hemipelagic sedimentation prevailed during most of the
Turonian-early Lutetian interval. This sedimentation is recorded by the so-called Capas Rojas and Quipar-
Jorquera formations, units up to 250 m and 425 m thick, respectively, predominantly consisting of marls and
marl/limestone alternations. These units draped and smoothed an irregular submarine topography of faultbounded
Mesozoic carbonate blocks. Some of these blocks became uplifted and subaerially exposed after a
mid-Danian tectonic episode, transforming the Subbetic Zone in an archipelago during the late Danian-early
Selandian interval. The emerged blocks were colonized by Microcodium-producing terrestrial plants,
Microcodium consisting of aggregates of submilimetric monocrystalline calcite grains. Massive resedimentation
of these grains into depressed zones of the archipelago resulted in discrete accumulations up to 100 m thick
but of comparatively modest extent (≤150 km2) of calcarenites rich in Microcodium remains. The study of one
of these calcarenite units, the Olivares Formation, demonstrates thatmost of its constituent Microcodiumremains
were brought to the deep sea by turbidity currents, but were subsequently reworked by oscillatory and unidirectional
bottom-currents. The analysis of the Capas Rojas Formation in its type section and surrounding areas,
where Microcodium-rich calcarenites are absent, demonstrates that the Danian-Selandian succession is riddled
with hiatuses, which resulted in a drastic thickness reduction of the interval. Clearly, the rugged sea floor topography
resulting from the mid-Danian tectonic event enhanced the sedimentary transport capacity of bottomcurrents
that, in addition to piling-up Microcodium-rich calcarenites in restricted zones, disturbed the
hemipelagic sedimentation elsewhere in the Subbetic Zone. From late Thanetian times onwards the background
hemipelagic sedimentation typical of the Capas Rojas progressively resumed throughout the Subbetic Zone, recording
the gradual abatement of the sea floor relief by protracted erosion and/or subsidence.