Abstract

The Middle–Late Ordovician Nuoduo and Huadan formations are well exposed at Songliang of northeastern Yunnan Province, representing rare neritic carbonate sediments deposited in the Yangtze region, South China during that time. Detailed sedimentological analyses support the recognition of ten microfacies from the succession, including shale (MF 1), argillaceous mudstone/dolostone (MF 2), mollusk-ostracod wacke-packstone (MF 3), peloidal wacke- to pack-grainstone/dolostone (MF 4), ooid-cortoid-peloid pack-grainstone/dolostone (MF 5), peloidal bindstone (MF 6), bioclastic wacke-packstone (MF 7), green algae mud-wackestone to floatstone (MF 8), bioclast-lithoclast float-rudstone (MF 9) and green algae bindstone (MF 10). Types A, B and C of shallowing-upward sequences are constructed according to vertical associations of MFs. The Nuoduo Formation mainly comprises Type A and Type B, both being characterized by abundant peloids, ooids, cortoids and aggregate grains. MF 5 and MF 6 cap the Type A and Type B sequences, respectively, suggesting an overall restricted marine environment shifting cyclically from lagoon to shoal, or lagoon to tidal flat, respectively. Type C sequences, occurring in the topmost Nuoduo to Huadan formations, contain various green algae indicative of open-sea, euphotic subtidal zones. The transition from A and B to C sequences is marked by ferruginous ooidal intervals, possibly correlated to relative sea-level rise and/or tectonic activities. A continuous neritic, warm-water environment is proposed for this area from late Middle to Late Ordovician, with the Nuoduo Formation filling the absence of warm-water deposits in the tropical or subtropical Yangtze region during Middle Ordovician. The increasing diversity and abundance of green algae in the Huadan Formation might represent a global radiation event of marine flora during the studied interval. Unique fossils and environments distinct from those of the interior Yangtze region are documented here, leading to a better understanding of the Ordovician System regionally and globally.

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