Cretaceous anoxic–oxic changes in the Moldavids (Carpathians, Romania)
详细信息    查看全文
文摘
This study focused on the Cretaceous black shale successions, followed by red shales that crop out at the outer regions of the Romanian Carpathians, in the Moldavids. The oldest parts of the black shale units deposited in an abyssal plain during Late Valanginian–Late Barremian time; they are mainly characterized by hemipelagic and pelagic muddy siliciclastic rocks and carbonates, commonly intercalated with fine-grained turbidites.

During the sedimentation of the middle part of the black shale units in the Late Barremian–Early Albian interval, the depth of the basin increased, as the carbonate hemipelagic sedimentation was replaced by a mainly siliceous one. Only a few thin turbidite intercalations are present.

The youngest part (Albian pro parte) of the black shale units is characterized by a turbiditic sedimentation, with mainly sandy sequences of middle and lower deep-water fans. We may assume that the depth of the basin continuously decreased. The presence of authigenic glauconite in the Albian sandstones suggests a palaeoenvironmental change, linked to the occurrence of oxygenated turbidity current circulation.

A significant shift in the sedimentation regime in the Eastern Carpathian Moldavids took place in the Late Albian, when Cretaceous Oceanic Red Beds (CORB) occurred. This type of sedimentation lasted up to the Coniacian. The lower part of the CORBs that contains radiolarites intercalated with variegated shales, pyroclastic tuffs and thin sandstones is interpreted as a hemipelagic and pelagic sedimentation in the abyssal plain environment, where rarely turbidites occurred. Upwards, there are mainly burrowed variegated red and green shales. The youngest parts of CORBs are characterized by increased thickness and frequency of the turbidites. While the main part of the CORB is carbonate free or has very low carbonate content, the upper part of these strata becomes rich in marl and mudstone strata, indicating a decrease of the basin-depth.

The accumulation of black shales in the Eastern Carpathians during the Late Valanginian–Late Albian interval is linked to the existence of a small, silled basin of the Moldavian Trough, in which restricted circulation led to the density stratification of the water column, resulting in the deposition of anoxic Lower Cretaceous sediments (i.e., the black shales). Because of the tectonic deformation that took place within the Lower–Upper Cretaceous boundary interval, the restricted circulation had changed to an open circulation regime in the Moldavian Trough. Hence, the anoxic regime was progressively replaced by an oxic one, across the Albian–Cenomanian boundary interval. The beginning and the end of the CORBs in the Moldavid units depend thus on various palaeogeographic and palaeoenvironmental settings, and it was controlled by the regional tectonic activity.

© 2004-2018 中国地质图书馆版权所有 京ICP备05064691号 京公网安备11010802017129号

地址:北京市海淀区学院路29号 邮编:100083

电话:办公室:(+86 10)66554848;文献借阅、咨询服务、科技查新:66554700