Facies and biota of Anisian to Carnian carbonate platforms in the Northern Calcareous Alps (Tyrol and Bavaria)

Facies ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Rüffer ◽  
Valeria Zamparelli
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philipp Strauss ◽  
Jonas Ruh ◽  
Benjamin Huet ◽  
Pablo Granado ◽  
Josep Anton Muñoz ◽  
...  

<p>The Mid Triassic section of the Northern Calcareous Alps (NCA) is dominated by carbonate platforms, which grew diachronously on the Neo-Tethys shelf beginning in the Middle Anisian and ending in Lower Carnian times. The platforms grew isolated in previous deeper marine settings with high growth rates reaching 1.5 to 2 mm per year. The concept of self-controlled growth of carbonate systems on salt changes the understanding of Mid-Triassic NCA sedimentology. Conceptual models of the carbonate platform growth were done based on field observations, construction of cross-sections and subsidence analysis of selected carbonate mini-basins. To satisfy the observed boundary conditions of platforms growth in respect of timing, water depth and basin evolution, fast accumulation rates have to be assumed best represented by salt deflation and down-building of carbonate minibasins. A feedback loop of carbonate growth (creating a load gradient) and subsidence by salt evacuation initiates once the pre-kinematic layer reaches the sea level and the first layer of carbonate is produced. An initial phase of fast carbonate aggradation ends once the salt below the platform is fully evacuated and the minibasin is primary welded.</p><p>To further analyse and quantify boundary conditions necessary for the observed carbonate mini basin evolution, a series of thermo-mechanical numerical experiments were conducted. The density and rheological parameters for rock salt applied in the experiments were mainly gathered from observations and mechanical experiments on salt from salt mines and from an exploration well by OMV in the Vienna Basin. The numerical simulations essentially support the concept of down-building carbonate platforms. Self-controlled growth of carbonate systems on salt allows a completely new perspective to understand Mid-Triassic NCA carbonate platforms and their boundary conditions, such as the accumulation of thick carbonates (>1.5 km) without basement faulting, the isolated growth of platforms, or the transition of aggradational to progradational growth.</p>


Author(s):  
Timotheus Martin Christoph Steiner ◽  
Hans-Jürgen Gawlick ◽  
Frank Melcher ◽  
Felix Schlagintweit

AbstractIn shallow-water limestones of the Plassen Formation in the Tirolic nappe of the Northern Calcareous Alps, bauxite was formed on karstified and tilted platform margin grainstones to boundstones around the ?Kimmeridgian/Tithonian boundary, or in the Early Tithonian as proven by Protopeneroplis striata Weynschenk, Labyrinthina mirabilis Weynschenk, and Salpingoporella pygmaea Gümbel. The platform established on top of the obducted ophiolite nappe stack. The onset of unroofing at the Kimmeridgian/Tithonian boundary exposed ophiolites to weathering, forming laterites, and bauxites. The weathered ophiolitic material was shed on the tilted, emerged, and karstified platform, where the bauxite accumulated. Continued subsidence led to flooding, and a Tithonian transgressive carbonate sequence sealed the bauxites. XRD analysis of the bauxite yields a composition of mainly boehmite with hematite and some berthierine, kaolinite, and chromite. SEM analysis verified magnetite, hematite, rutile, chromite, zircon, ferropseudobrookite, ilmenite, monazite, xenotime, and garnet distributed in pisoids and within the matrix. The pisoids reach a millimeter in size and partly show cores of older, larger pisoids. The composition of the chromites indicates an ophiolitic origin. Geochemical examination using major- and trace elements points to a mafic andesitic to basaltic parent material contaminated with highly fractionated rocks from an island arc. Formation of Early Tithonian bauxites in shallow-water limestones confirms Middle to Early Late Jurassic ophiolite obduction. This was followed by uplift and unroofing of the orogen from the Kimmeridgian/Tithonian boundary onwards after a period of relative tectonic quiescence with an onset of carbonate platforms during the Kimmeridgian on top of the nappe stack and the obducted Neo-Tethys ophiolites.


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