Abstract

Abstract. Palynomorph and foraminiferal assemblages have been studied from the Upper Pliensbachian to Bathonian of a borehole section on the island of Anholt in the Kattegat, situated near the eastern margin of the Norwegian-Danish Basin. Palynomorphs were recorded throughout the succession and have been used for both biostratigraphical and palaeoenvironmental assessments. Foraminifera were recorded from only the lower part of the succession, where they proved useful for interpreting palaeoenvironments. Four palynomorph and three foraminiferal zones have been established.The interval encompasses a palaeoenvironmental transition from a marine, inner shelf setting to mainly terrestrial conditions. The Upper Pliensbachian-Toarcian boundary marks the beginning of a major regression, which continued through the Toarcian and Aalenian. Hence, it took place significantly earlier at Anholt than in the centre of the Norwegian-Danish Basin, where a lowering of sea level did not occur until the late Toarcian.The Jurassic succession on Anholt spans the Fjerritslev and Haldager Sand formations; biostratigraphical data indicate that the Lower-Middle Jurassic boundary is here located within the uppermost part of the Fjerritslev Formation. The Fjerritslev and Haldager Sand formational transition was previously considered to coincide with the Lower-Middle Jurassic boundary.

Highlights

  • Jurassic strata were studied from a boring on the small Danish island of Anholt in the Kattegat (Fig. 1).This site is located near the eastern margin of the Norwegian-Danish Basin, which extended across most of Denmark into the present North Sea during the Early and Mid Jurassic

  • Our study focuses on the biostratigraphy and palaeoecology of the uppermost Lower Jurassic to Middle Jurassic section

  • The purpose of this study is to provide a biostratigraphic subdivision of the succession using microfossils, and to evaluate the palaeoenvironmental setting at the basin margin

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Summary

Introduction

Jurassic strata were studied from a boring on the small Danish island of Anholt in the Kattegat (Fig. 1).This site is located near the eastern margin of the Norwegian-Danish Basin, which extended across most of Denmark into the present North Sea during the Early and Mid Jurassic. This depocentre continued into the Danish-Polish Trough to the south-east, and was delimited by the Fennoscandian Shield to the north and north-east and by the Ringk~bing-Fyn High to the south (Sorgenfrei & Buch, 1964; Michelsen, 1978; Liboriussen e f al., 1987). The purpose of this study is to provide a biostratigraphic subdivision of the succession using microfossils, and to evaluate the palaeoenvironmental setting at the basin margin

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