Abstract

The Taulanne Limestone Formation of the Castellane region (South Alpine Foreland Basin of France) represents an Oligocene lake depositional system developed above the marine Nummulitic succession. A sedimentological analysis of the Taulanne limestone allows the identification of nine marine, lacustrine, and palustrine facies. The spatial and temporal distribution of these facies records five depositional sequences that are correlated between the Sant Peire section (edge of the lake) and the Pres section (central lake). Water-level variations highlight the high-frequency balance between drying and wetting periods under fluctuating climatic conditions. Lacustrine facies developed during more humid periods while palustrine facies correspond to more arid conditions and longer lake shoreline exposure. At the basin scale, the lateral changes in accommodation space are attributed to differential subsidence between the Pres and the Sant Peire sections, which permitted the deposition of a thicker succession in the central part of the lake (Pres section). The Taulanne limestone records a marine to continental transition. The progressive filling of the basin is related to the regional tectonic activity, namely the emplacement of the Embrun-Ubaye nappes to the northeast of the study area at about 30–32 Ma. This final regressive trend represents the transition between the underfilled flysch stage (marine Nummulitic succession) of a foreland-basin cycle to the overfilled stage (alluvial Red Molasse deposits) during the primary exhumation of the Internal Alps.

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