Abstract

This paper offers a new contribution to our ongoing harmonization efforts concerning the chronostratigraphic model of the southern France Urgonian-type carbonate platforms, which surrounded the Vocontian Basin during the Early Cretaceous. A multi-stratigraphic approach on the classical sections of the Ardèche River gorges and the Saint-Remèze Plateau have been used for reconstructing the evolution of the Bas-Vivarais Urgonian domain along an inner-to-outer platform profile; the latter being nearly perpendicular to the eastern Vocontian platform margin. In our transect, the installation and first developments of the Urgonian platform domain occured during the early Barremian Taveraidiscus hugii and Kotetishvilia nicklesi ammonite zones. This first platform stage was interrupted at a brief emersion episode that lasted through the Nicklesia pulchella ammonite zone, and resulted in the deposition of a sedimentary wedge with limited gradual downward, basinward shift in inner platform facies. This was followed by the regional deposition of shallow-water communities dominated by corals, echinoids, and orbitolinids, which passes basinward into open-marine, ammonite-bearing marly deposits in the Saint-Remèze Plateau outcrops. This change in facies was previously referred to as the Serre de Tourre Beds (STB), and dated to the Kotetishvilia compressissima and Moutoniceras moutonianum ammonite zones. The STB are further identified to as the local sedimentary expression of the Mid-Barremian Event recording a brief warming climate pulse testified by the presence of Offneria simplex, a caprinid rudist of Caribbean origin. Above, there is a regional recovery of inner platform Urgonian facies during the early late Barremian showing a striking progradational basinward trend. The latter, and its subsequent developments are in need of investigations. Taken together, the general evolution of the Urgonian Bas-Vivarais domain shows strong similarities with the sedimentary context of the nearby Subalpine Urgonian platform during the early Barremian. The finding of common sedimentary signals is more difficult with the Provence platform domain at that time.

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