Abstract

The four sections richest in bivalves from the Middle and Upper Jurassic of the Iberian Range (Spain) were selected for a quantitative palaeoecological analysis of the bivalve fraction of the macrobenthos. Five bivalve associations and two assemblages were recognized with the help of a Q–mode hierarchical cluster analysis (Ward method). The main environmental factors controlling bivalve associations are thought to be substrate, water energy and distribution of organic matter. The bivalves exhibit a distinct spatial and temporal distribution pattern within the Aragonian Branch of the Iberian Range. Four of the bivalve associations occur in the Upper Oxfordian (Sot de Chera Fm) and one association in the Lower Callovian (Chelva Fm). In the Sot de Chera and Loriguilla formations, the abundance of bivalves decreases from NW to SE i.e., from relatively close to the shore line towards the distal-most part of the carbonate platform. In the Chelva Fm, bivalves are abundant in the Ariño region, interpreted as a palaeogeographic high. The spatial distribution of bivalves might have been largely controlled by the availability of nutrients.

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