2006 Philadelphia Annual Meeting (22–25 October 2006)

Paper No. 3
Presentation Time: 2:00 PM

MIXED SILICICLASTIC/CARBONATE ENVIRONMENTS FROM THE CENOZOIC NORTH ALPINE FORELAND BASIN: POSSIBILITIES AND LIMITATIONS OF INTERPRETING COMPLEX EPI-CONTINENTAL SEDIMENTS


NEBELSICK, James H., Institute of Geosciences, University of Tuebingen, Sigwartstrasse 10, Tuebingen, 72076, Germany, BIEG, Ulrich, Institute of Applied Geosciences, Technical University of Darmstadt, Schnittspahnstrasse 9, Darmstadt, D-64287, Germany and RASSER, Michael, Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde, Rosenstein 1, Stuttgart, D-70191, Germany, nebelsick@uni-tuebingen.de

The Cenozoic, North Alpine Foreland Basin is characterized by large scale alternation of marine and non-marine conditions constituting the classic Molasse sedimentary sequence. This dramatic fluctuation of sedimentary regimes has been related to the complex interaction of tectonic uplift and erosion of the alpine chain to the south, the varied background geology of the stable European platform to the north, eustatic sea level changes and not the least, paleogeographic developments including the formation of the Paratethys Seaway. The resulting marine sediments are mostly dominated by siliciclastics, but also contain intriguing mixed siliciclastic/carbonate environments. Although carbonates are spatially and temporally isolated, the analysis of their biogenic constituents and facies relationships provides a wealth of paleoecological information in addition to the sedimentological data at hand. This study is based on new detailed sedimentological and paleontological analysis of classic localities from the Lower Miocene, Upper Marine Molasse Zone from south-western Germany. These localities include, among others, a mixed siliciclastic/carbonate environment with higher energy, cross-bedded sands and bryomol type carbonate sediments (“Randengrobkalk”) and an isolated mass occurrence of turritellid gastropods (“Erminger Turritellenplatte”). Paleontological data is juxtaposed to sedimentological criteria, and both are compared to large scale modelling of tidal and wave movement within the Molasse Zone as well as to climatic reconstruction derived from both terrestrial and marine records from the Miocene of Europe. The possibilities and difficulties of applying actualistic sedimentary and facies models from Recent epi-continental seas for interpretation is discussed, not the least with respect to the rapid changes in background tectonics setting, paleogeography and climate which dictated sedimentation in the Molasse Sea during the Cenozoic.