Abstract

Cenomanian strata of the Elbtal Group (Saxony, eastern Germany) reflect a major global sea-level rise and contain, in certain intervals, a green authigenic clay mineral in abundance. Based on the integrated study of five new core sections, the environmental background and spatio-temporal patterns of these glauconitic strata are reconstructed and some general preconditions allegedly needed for glaucony formation are critically questioned. XRD analyses of green grains extracted from selected samples confirm their glauconitic mineralogy. Based on field observations as well as on the careful evaluation of litho- and microfacies, 12 glauconitc facies types (GFTs), broadly reflecting a proximal–distal gradient, have been identified, containing granular and matrix glaucony of exclusively intrasequential origin. When observed in stratigraphic succession, GFT-1 to GFT-12 commonly occur superimposed in transgressive cycles starting with the glauconitic basal conglomerates, followed up-section by glauconitic sandstones, sandy glauconitites, fine-grained, bioturbated, argillaceous and/or marly glauconitic sandstones; glauconitic argillaceous marls, glauconitic marlstones, and glauconitic calcareous nodules continue the retrogradational fining-upward trend. The vertical facies succession with upwards decreasing glaucony content demonstrates that the center of production and deposition of glaucony in the Cenomanian of Saxony was the nearshore zone. This time-transgressive glaucony depocenter tracks the regional onlap patterns of the Elbtal Group, shifting southeastwards during the Cenomanian 2nd-order sea-level rise. The substantial development of glaucony in the thick (60 m) uppermost Cenomanian Pennrich Formation, reflecting a tidal, shallow-marine, nearshore siliciclastic depositional system and temporally corresponding to only ~ 400 kyr, shows that glaucony formation occurred under wet, warm-temperate conditions, high accumulation rates and on rather short-term time scales. Our new integrated data thus indicate that environmental factors such as great water depth, cool temperatures, long time scales, and sediment starvation had no impact on early Late Cretaceous glaucony formation in Saxony, suggesting that the determining factors of ancient glaucony may be fundamentally different from recent conditions and revealing certain limitations of the uniformitarian approach.

Highlights

  • The sedimentary strata of the Cenomanian Stage record one of the largest sea-level rises of the Mesozoic Era (e.g., Hancock and Kauffman 1979; Haq et al 1987; Hancock 1989; Robaszynski et al 1998; Wilmsen 2003; Kuhnt et al 2009; Haq 2014)

  • Glauconitic strata have been subdivided into facies types and picked green grains from selected samples have been analyzed for their mineralogy using X-ray diffraction

  • The X-ray diffractograms (XRD) analyses of green grains extracted from Cenomanian samples of the lower Elbtal Group in Saxony revealed that the constituting mineral is in any case a 10-Å-mineral of the glaucony group (Fig. 8)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The sedimentary strata of the Cenomanian Stage record one of the largest sea-level rises of the Mesozoic Era (e.g., Hancock and Kauffman 1979; Haq et al 1987; Hancock 1989; Robaszynski et al 1998; Wilmsen 2003; Kuhnt et al 2009; Haq 2014). B Palaeogeographic setting of the Saxonian Cretaceous Basin (SCB). C Chrono-, bio- and lithostrati­ graphy of the Elbtal Group, supplemented and modified after Wilmsen et al (2019) and Niebuhr et al (2020); glaucony occurrences are indicated In the Saxonian Cretaceous Basin of eastern Germany, transgressive glauconitic strata received early attention (Geinitz 1850) and have been regionally mapped at the base of the Cretaceous successions in the Meißen–Dresden area (Beck and Hazard 1893; Siegert 1906). This paper concentrates and complements the information on greensand deposits in the Cretaceous of Saxony based on the detailed logging of new Cenomanian sections associated with careful petrographical and mineralogical analyses of glauconitic intervals. Some conditional prerequisites allegedly needed for glaucony formation, deeply entrenched in the literature, are critically scrutinized

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call