Abstract
Chattian mixed carbonate-siliciclastic deposits from two palaeogeographic units of Southern Alps, the Lessini Shelf and Venetian foreland basin of northeast Italy, are studied with respect to facies distributions and controlling ecological factors on dominant biogenic components. These ramp depositional systems are located in the western Southern Alps on the Lessini Shelf, and in the eastern Southern Alps in the Venetian foreland basin. The successions show an extensive geographic distribution of at least 150 km × 40 km at the southern margin of the Southern Alps. Palaeoenvironments are inferred following microfacies characteristics and floral and faunal indicators, especially those of coralline red algae and larger foraminifera. An inner- to middle homoclinal ramp morphology is reconstructed based on facies distributions and taxonomic and coralline algal growth-form proxy data. The distribution along depositional strike shows variation from thinner, carbonate dominated sequence in the west (Monti Berici and Monti Lessini) to a more variable, mixed carbonate-siliciclastic dominated environment to the east (Vittorio Veneto, Alpago). Facies character and occurrence are controlled by local hydrodynamic conditions and varying water turbidity of the studied ramp depositional system. The general facies succession shows a transgressive sequence from the proximal inner- to proximal middle ramp. A shoal belt of trough cross-bedded sandstones occurs in a proximal inner ramp position in all of the studied areas. In a gentle-dipping homoclinal ramp, most benthic organisms inhabited the relatively quite environments off these shoals in a distal inner ramp setting. Basinward environments (proximal middle ramp) constitute areas of maximal carbonate production and consist primarily of larger foraminiferal facies and rhodolith pavements. Larger foraminifera, represented by two larger foraminiferal assemblages, are most diversified in the shallower settings (near the fair-weather wave base, distal inner/proximal middle ramp), whereas coralline algae predominate in deeper areas (proximal middle ramp) constructing extensive rhodolith pavements. Rhodolith pavements are distinguished with respect to rhodolith shape, size, growth-forms and coralline algal taxonomic composition. Larger foraminifera are interpreted with respect to shell structures, shell architectures and comparable Recent counterparts. The analysed benthic communities thrived in a mesotrophic regime within trophic gradients constrained by fluvial influence. Coralline algal dominance and a moderately diverse larger foraminiferal assemblage suggest a tropical/warm temperate transition. The considerable stability imposed on sediments by the rhodolith pavement must also have significantly contributed to the maintenance of a middle ramp profile bulge. This study will contribute to a better understanding of Oligocene carbonates which have received less attention than their Eocene or Miocene counterparts.
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