Abstract
In order to better constrain the chronology of the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC) onland and to provide new observations on the stratigraphic position of the Messinian erosional surface as well as evidence for continentalization, we have studied the Mio-Pleistocene succession of the island of Ibiza, ideally located in a strategic position between the peripheral Messinian basins of south-eastern Spain and the MSC-related gypsum of the Palma Basin (Mallorca).Five lithological units are identified and compared with those known from the island of Mallorca. The equivalent of the “reef” unit, mainly Tortonian in age, is composed of median to inner ramp facies. It is overlain by coastal alluvial fans set up under extensive tectonic control, and then by a carbonate unit rich in oolites and microbialites attributed to the Terminal Carbonate Complex (TCC) of Messinian age. The overlying red clays fossilizing paleosols express a continentalization phase at the end of the Miocene. This regressive episode is evidenced by karstification and erosion incising the pre-crisis units and shaping valleys connected to submarine canyons. The erosion surface is linked to the acme of the MSC, a major sea-level fall, and is then sealed by Pliocene coastal calcarenites or by Pleistocene eolianites. The emptying of the basin led to a global collapse, which is recorded on all the slope domains of the Mediterranean margins. We document this collapse for the first time onland by syn-MSC gravity events such as mudflows, upwelling of geothermal fluids under pressure and soft deformation of the TCC. The interweaving of these phenomena of multiple origin (baselevel decrease, climate change, geothermal activity, sediment transfer) contributes to the onland/offshore reshaping of the Mediterranean margins during the major environmental changes of the Messinian salinity crisis.
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