Trilobites and ichnofossils from a new fossil Lagerstätte in the Lower Cambrian Pardailhan Formation, southern Montagne Noire, France

Geobios ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 277-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Vizcaïno ◽  
J.Javier Álvaro ◽  
Éric Monceret
1998 ◽  
Vol 89 (3) ◽  
pp. 135-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Javier Álvaro ◽  
Emmanuelle Vennin ◽  
Daniel Vizcaïno

AbstractLower Cambrian shallow-water carbonates enclosing microbial structures are documented for the first time from the upper Lastours Member of the Montagne Noire (southern France). Microbial organisms constructed self-supported boundstones resulting in the formation of exclusively microbial-accreted buildups, which exhibit three main types of non-skeletal microbialites: planar stratiform stromatolites, dome-shaped stromatolites and nonlaminated (thrombolitic) biostromes. In addition, thrombolitic boundstones display four distinct microbial microstructures: clotted andRenalcis-like forms, branching bushy forms, clusters of unbranching straight filaments and crustose forms.The upper member of the Lastours Formation records an upward transition from a shalydominant open shelf to a protected shelf environment bounded by a surface representing a major subaerial exposure. Initially, at the inception of the highstand systems tract, flat stratiform stromatolites formed on open sea subtidal shaly substrates, while stacked domal stromatolites developed in peritidal areas which record subaerial exposure. In contrast, prograding shoal barriers of the transgressive systems tract favoured the establishment of thrombolitic boundstones in protected (back-shoal) environments.


2002 ◽  
Vol 173 (6) ◽  
pp. 533-546 ◽  
Author(s):  
Françoise Debrenne ◽  
Anna Gandin ◽  
Pierre Courjault-Radé

Abstract Archaeocyath-bearing limestones of the Lower Cambrian Pardailhan Formation of southern Montagne Noire are restricted to few intervals (H1, H2, H3) of the mixed carbonate-detrital succession exposed in several superposed tectonic units affected by severe deformation. The comparative analysis of the archaeocyath assemblages together with a detailed sedimentological investigation leads to the understanding of the depositional settings and of the building style of the calcimicrobial-archaeocyath groups and to a better definition of the paleogeographic relationships of the different tectonic units. Interval H1: small, low-relief ‘pioneer reefs’ built by Epiphyton bushes and Girvanella crusts, associated with clusters of small stick-shaped archaeocyaths, colonized the detrital sand of the bottom. They are frequent in southern Minervois and more randomly distributed in northern Minervois and northern and southern Pardailhan and represent short-lived attempts of carbonate colonization on the sandy, mobile substrate of a wide continental shelf. Interval H2: Platy and bioclastic grainstones form the substrate and apron of small crust/cement reefs and associated clusters of ribbon-like and conical archaeocyaths in southern Minervois, or of mud-rich calcimicrobial mounds in southern Pardailhan. Displaced cups of stick-shaped archaeocyaths similar to those of Interval H1, occur in the granular facies, while in place saucer-like cups of Anthomorpha margarita are associated to the mud-rich mounds. This facies association records the repeated attempt at instauration and discrete development of a carbonate platform made of low-relief banks, the margins of which were colonized by Girvanella crust-buildups whereas in the more protected deeper zones Epiphyton/Renalcis mud-mounds dominated. Interval H3: Epiphyton/Renalcis, mud-rich mounds with solitary, large saucer-like cups of Anthomorpha margarita, represented by long, ribbon-like fragments, are dominant in the upper part of the platform. They rest on reduced lenses of grainstone and Girvanella crust boundstone and in southern Pardailhan are interbedded with nodular, marly mudstones containing bioclastic debris partly derived from the buildups. In this area they mark the transition from platform to shallow basin.


1962 ◽  
Vol S7-IV (4) ◽  
pp. 572-575 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francois Boyer

Abstract The lower Cambrian deposits of the Carcassonne-Saint-Pons region, France, are characterized by similar sequences of lithologic units at widely spaced localities and by lithofacies marker horizons which are persistent over wide areas. Lithofacies analyses of other parts of the Paleozoic section in the region lead to the conclusion that the region constitutes a homogeneous tectonic unit.


2004 ◽  
Vol 175 (6) ◽  
pp. 643-655 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernard Laumonier ◽  
Albert Autran ◽  
Pierre Barbey ◽  
Alain Cheilletz ◽  
Thierry Baudin ◽  
...  

Abstract The deepest Hercynian metamorphic terrains in the Pyrenees and in the nearby Montagne Noire are made up of medium-grade orthogneisses and micaschists, and of high-grade, often granulitic, paragneisses. The existence of a granitic-metamorphic Cadomian basement and of its sedimentary Lower Paleozoic cover was advocated from the following main arguments: (i) a supposed unconformity of the Lower Cambrian Canaveilles Group (the lower part of the Paleozoic series) upon both granitic and metamorphic complexes; (ii) a ca. 580 Ma U-Pb age for the metagranitic Canigou gneisses. A SE to NW transgression of the Cambrian cover and huge Variscan recumbent (“penninic”) folds completed this classical model. However, recent U-Pb dating provided a ca. 474 Ma, early Ordovician (Arenigian) age for the me-tagranites, whereas the Vendian age (581 ± 10 Ma) of the base of the Canaveilles Group was confirmed [Cocherie et al., 2005]. In fact, these granites are laccoliths intruded at different levels of the Vendian-Lower Cambrian series. So the Cadomian granitic basement model must be discarded. In a new model, developed in the Pyrenees and which applies to the Montagne Noire where the orthogneisses appear to be Lower Ordovician intrusives too, there are neither transgression of the Paleozoic nor very large Hercynian recumbent folds. The pre-Variscan (pre-Upper Ordovician) series must be divided in two groups: (i) at the top, the Jujols Group, mainly early to late Cambrian, that belongs to a Cambrian-Ordovician sedimentary and magmatic cycle ; the early Ordovician granites pertain to this cycle; (ii) at the base, the Canaveilles Group of the Pyrenees and the la Salvetat-St-Pons series of the Montagne Noire, Vendian (to earliest Cambrian?), are similar to the Upper Alcudian series of Central Iberia. The Canaveilles Group is a shale-greywacke series with rhyodacitic volcanics, thick carbonates, black shales, etc. The newly defined olistostromic and carbonated, up to 150 m thick Tregurà Formation forms the base of the Jujols Group, which rests more or less conformably on the Canaveilles Group. The high-grade paragneisses which in some massifs underlie the Canaveilles and Jujols low- to medium grade metasediments are now considered to be an equivalent of the Canaveilles Group with a higher Variscan metamorphic grade; they are not derived from metamorphic Precambrian rocks. So, there is no visible Cadomian metamorphic (or even sedimentary) basement in the Pyrenees. However, because of its age, the Canaveilles Group belongs to the end of the Cadomian cycle and was deposited in a subsident basin, probably a back-arc basin which developed in the Cadomian, active-transform N-Gondwanian margin of this time. The presence of Cadomian-Panafrican (ca. 600 Ma) zircon cores in early Ordovician granites and Vendian volcanics implies the anatexis of a thick (> 15 km?) syn-Cadomian series, to be compared to the very thick Lower Alcudian series of Central Iberia, which underlies the Upper Alcudian series. Nd isotopic compositions of Neoproterozoic and Cambrian-Ordovician sediments and magmatites, as elsewhere in Europe, yield Paleoproterozoic (ca. 2 Ga) model-ages. From the very rare occurrences of rocks of this age in W-Europe, it can be envisionned that the thick Pyrenean Cadomian series lies on a Paleoproterozoic metamorphic basement. But, if such a basement does exist, it must be “hidden”, as well as the lower part of the Neoproterozoic series, in the Variscan restitic granulites of the present (Variscan) lower crust. So a large part of the pre-Variscan crust was made of volcano-sedimentary Cadomian series, explaining the “fertile” characteristics of this crust which has been able to produce the voluminous Lower Ordovician and, later, Upper Carboniferous granitoids.


Geobios ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 397-409 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Javier Álvaro ◽  
Olaf Elicki ◽  
Françoise Debrenne ◽  
Daniel Vizcaïno

Author(s):  
D.A. Burdakov ◽  
◽  
V.N. Sibilev ◽  
O.V. Tokareva ◽  
V.A. Kolesov ◽  
...  

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