Abstract

The Paleogene carbonate deposits of Pabdeh and Jahrum formations are widespread from the northwest (Dashte Zari area) to the southwest of the Shahrekord region in the High Zagros Mountains of Iran and record the lateral and upward transition from open marine into the shallow water environment. The Pabdeh Formation shows a succession of open marine pelagic and hemipelagic limestone, argillaceous limestone, and argillaceous chert. It consists of planktonic wackestone, pellet-planktonic wackestone, mudstone with planktonic foraminifera, and radiolarian siliceous wackestone, which accumulated within the Zagros Foreland Basin. The planktonic foraminifers are assigned to the Late Paleocene–Late Eocene and correspond to subtropical and tropical Zones P4b–E15. The Jahrum Formation is represented by bioclast-bearing limestone and calcarenite. It consists of benthic foraminiferal wackestone, benthic foraminiferal-red algal packstone, and bioclast-intraclast packstone deposited in a shallow platform environment. The Jahrum Formation is inter-fingered in the upper part of the Pabdeh Formation and finally overlies it conformably during the Bartonian–Priabonian. Shallowing and off-lap relationships record basin shrinking, while repeated inter-fingering signals moderate tectonic subsidence. Both formations are disconformably covered by the Late Oligocene–Miocene Asmari Formation. Keywords: biostratigraphy, Pabdeh Formation, Zagros, Paleogene, Iran.

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