Abstract

Fluvio-lacustrine deposits are promising archives that afford to decipher climate and tectonic signatures, typically when evidence of changes in the depositional settings therein is remarkable. As such, the present work coveys a case study whose fluvio-lacustrine deposits may serve to provide insights into climate and tectonic controls on palaeoenvironmental settings. The study area lies in the northwestern portion of Ain Cheggag, southeastern the Sais foreland basin (northern Morocco). The lithostratigraphical analysis of Plio-Quaternary fluvio-lacustrine deposits in the area has enabled the identification of nine facies. The depositional systems are organized into three deposit units, each of which reflects a typical depositional environment. The first (lower) unit consists of detrital facies implying deposition in alluvial-dominated settings. The alternation of detrital and carbonate facies giving way to the second (middle) unit suggests sedimentation in a fluvio-lacustrine environment. Whilst being carbonate-rich, the third (upper) unit reflects a shift into lacustrine-dominated settings. Accordingly, the vertical succession of the sedimentary pile delivers remarkable insights into a general palaeo-environmental shift from alluvial settings, with enhanced pedogenesis processes, towards carbonate-dominated lacustrine conditions where early- and late-stage diagenesis processes would have prevailed. This broad shift in depositional systems is likely to be the response of palaeohydrological changes that are modulated both by the neotectonic subsidence background and, specifically, the general palaeoclimate evolution towards more humid conditions. Bioturbation, desiccation, and void-filling with internal sediments are key features of early-stage diagenesis processes, whereas cementation, micritization, recrystallization, dissolution, and iron and manganese oxidation are the main features of late-stage diagenesis altering the primary structures of the studied deposits. Finally, we highlight the significance of fluviolacustrine deposits in deciphering palaeoclimatic signatures and tectonic implications.

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