Abstract
Continental clastic red-beds including red and fine- to medium-grained sandstone, pebbly sandstone, and conglomerates are distributed in the Sai Yok area of western Thailand. This rock sequence is known as the Jurassic Kaeng Raboet Formation by Thai geologists. A similar clastic rock succession, approximately 150 m thick, outcropping at Wat Phu Toey, near Ban Tha Sao, was investigated for paleontological analysis. The lithostratigraphy of the sequence in this section consists of Units 1-3 in ascending order. Unit 1 is characterized by pebble-sized chert conglomerates, Unit 2 by medium-grained massive sandstone, and Unit 3 by fine-grained red sandstone and shale with ripple marks and cross-laminations. Several thin layers of chert conglomerate are intercalated in the lower parts of Units 2 and 3. We collected six chert conglomerate samples from this section and distinguished Tournaisian (Lower Carboniferous) to middle Norian (Upper Triassic) radiolarian-bearing chert clasts that have not been not separated as single clasts but treated as one sample. Although the preservation of radiolarians is generally poor, we identified 40 species belonging to 26 genera with one radiolarian gen. et sp. indet. The exact age of the Kaeng Raboet Formation is still equivocal; however, we assigned the age of the red-bed to the Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous based on the presence of Middle Jurassic foraminifer-bearing limestone clasts in the limestone conglomerate embedded in equivalent formations. The present chert conglomerate, including radiolarian-bearing chert clasts is interpreted to have been derived from the grained siliceous rock bodies of the Mae Sariang Zone and deposited in an alluvial depositional basin and braided river system during the Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous.
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