Abstract
The upper Serpukhovian Poruba Member (c. 325–324 Ma) is a coal-bearing “paralic” succession deposited in the Upper Silesian Coal Basin located along the eastern foreland of the Moravo-Silesian segment of the Variscan fold and thrust belt. The basin formed an >150 km long, tectonically controlled embayment open to the north and northeast, with estuarine circulation, predominance of fluvial discharge and a limited tidal influence. A high-accommodation depocentre (possibly up to 1100 m/Myr) was filled by shallowing-upward successions related to the progradation of river dominated (bay-head) deltas, with subordinate fluvial and marine sediments. These strata form two orders of transgressive-regressive cycles, or genetic sequences, both overlapping with the Milankovitch band. Intervals of maximum transgression, marked by marine or brackish faunal horizons, immediately overlie coal beds, suggesting non-accretionary transgression in a low energy setting. Six medium-term genetic sequences (cyclothems) are recognized, each consisting of 4 to 6 elementary sequences and a number of smaller scale units of possible autocyclic origin. The medium-term sequences are attributed to a combined influence of relative sea-level change and changes in sediment input, both possibly as a far field response to Gondwanan glaciation through glacioeustasy and attendant changes in climatic seasonality.
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