Abstract

Thick gypsum‑carbonate sequences were deposited in different periods and basins of Europe during the westward opening of the Tethys Ocean. Although they seem to represent widespread perimarine sulphate-dominated lagoons in shallow epeiric platforms, the sedimentary characteristics and interpretation of these deposits are still poorly constrained. To advance in the knowledge of these deposits, a detailed study is presented of two distinctive sulphate dominated sequences of Late Triassic age located in NE Iberia (Western Europe), which correspond to the Canelles and Espinagosa units, found in the southern Pyrenees and the Catalan Coastal Ranges respectively. These sequences present a diverse suite of carbonate and sulphate lithofacies, which are stacked in several recurring sedimentary cycles. These cycles consistently present a carbonate base that transitions to a sulphate top, and can be correlated along several tens of kilometres. Each of the observed cycles depicts an initial sudden flooding of a tidal-lagoon system by marine water, which led to carbonate-dominated sedimentation. Progressive evaporation under dominant arid climate conditions triggered the shallowing of the lagoon and salinisation of its water. Then, a transition from carbonate to gypsum/anhydrite precipitation and the early dolomitisation of the underlying carbonate sediments by brine reflux occurred. Gypsum precipitated in the water column as cumulate crystals and deposited at the bottom of the lagoon, forming laminations or being incorporated into microbial mats. Anhydrite precipitated as early diagenetic crystals in the different subaqueous and subaerial environments of the tidal-lagoon system, leading to a variated set of lithofacies until now largely undocumented. It mainly formed as displacive lath-shaped crystals randomly oriented within carbonate muds at the bottom of the lagoon, which were mostly reworked at the lagoon margins by wave and tidal currents resulting in aligned fabrics in cross-lamination structures. Anhydrite also formed as pure massive beds by anhydritisation of subaerially exposed gypsum sediments during the main retraction stages of the lagoon, as well as typical nodular (sabkha) lithofacies. Such sulphate lithofacies are not easy recognisable due to the lack of modern analogues to compare and to their current transformation into secondary gypsum in the outcrops. These are aspects to be taken into account in future sedimentological studies on similar evaporitic materials.

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