Abstract

Stratigraphic cycles preserved in sedimentary successions are controlled by the interaction of tectonics, climate, sediment supply and sea-level variations. Understanding the influence of these drivers on sedimentary systems dynamics is crucial to understand and extract information from sedimentary archives. In the deep marine deposits of the Ainsa foreland basin (lower to middle Eocene, southern central Pyrenees, Spain), the origin of well-preserved cyclicity between channelized sandy submarine fans and hemipelagic deposits remains subject to debate because of the absence of chronostratigraphic constraints on high resolution geochemical proxies. Here, we contrast a combination of newly acquired and legacy geochemical datasets (carbon and oxygen stable isotopes, organic matter content, major and trace elements and the mineralogical composition of bulk hemipelagic sediments) tuned by a new age model to global “target” curves to discuss the possible drivers of the stratigraphic cycles found in the deep marine sediment gravity flow deposits of the Hecho Group. Our new age model is based on magnetostratigraphic and biostratigraphic datasets acquired on a composite section going from the Banaston system to the distal deposits of the Sobrarbe deltaic complex. Four major polarity zones are identified in the studied succession covering the time span from C21n (lower members of the Banaston system) to C19r (Sobrarbe deltaic complex). Our age model is corroborated by the identification of the nannoplankton zone NP16 in the Guaso system (C20n).Comparison between global carbon isotope curve and local isotope dataset shows some differences, suggesting the preservation of a local isotope signal modulated by eustatism, changes in the environment of deposition and/or restriction in water circulation in the Ainsa basin. Yet, comparison of the stratigraphic record with global sea-level curves highlights that sands are mainly delivered to the basin during lowstands, pointing to the important role of eustasy even in an active foreland tectonic context. The exception to the rule is the Banaston member II, whose deposition during a sea-level highstand seems to be controlled by the growth of tectonic structures.

Highlights

  • Stratigraphic cycles that characterize sedimentary records can be detected in depositional environments from continental to deep marine sinks worldwide

  • A complete stratigraphic succession was sampled from Gerbe to Guaso Sediment Gravity Flow (SGF) systems in the Ainsa basin for (1) magnetostratigraphy and (2) high resolution geochemical proxies

  • We highlight the importance of studying deep-sea environments by a multi-proxy approach to disentangle complex signals recorded in set­ tings with a high preservation potential

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Summary

Introduction

Stratigraphic cycles that characterize sedimentary records can be detected in depositional environments from continental to deep marine sinks worldwide. Sedimentary deposition is driven, through modulation of accommodation and 1 currently at Institute of Geological Sciences, Freie Universitat Berlin, 12249 Berlin, Germany. Sediment supply, by the interaction of (1) global sea-level and eustatic variations related to climate and global tectonics, (2) local/regional tectonics, and/or (3) sediment supply (itself linked to global climate and tectonics) (e.g., Schlager, 1993; Castelltort and Van Den Driessche, 2003; Covault and Graham, 2010; Romans et al, 2016). Sedimentary records contain crucial information regarding past climate and envi­ ronmental signals. Deep marine environments are perfect targets to study these signals since large volumes of sediment are continuously deposited in submarine fans where the preservation potential is high (Hessler and Fildani, 2019)

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