Abstract

The paleogeography of the Late Neogene Atlantic-Mediterranean seaway via the Betic-Rifean Domain is quite complex due to the presence of several marine corridors. The study of transitional basins in these seaways is crucial to understand the configuration and evolution of the Mediterranean-Atlantic inter-connection. A mixed skeletal-siliciclastic sandstone succession located in one of these transitional areas (Guadix Basin, Southern Spain) was studied from a comprehensive paleontological standpoint focused on the main benthic assemblages (foraminifera, brachiopods, and trace fossils), integrating the data with the study of planktic foraminifera for an accurate biostratigraphic framework. Brachiopods are mostly represented by the Aphelesia-Gryphus assemblage. Two trace fossil assemblages were observed, dominated by Ophiomorpha with Bichordites (1) and Macaronichnus (2), respectively. The benthic foraminiferal assemblage is mostly represented by Planulina and Cibicides. The data gathered from the benthic communities reveal habitats with high-energy and turbulent conditions in an outer neritic-upper bathyal bathymetric range. Brachiopods from the Alicun section show a Mediterranean paleobiogeographic affinity. They were constrained in the Late Tortonian to the restricted basins of the Betic-Rifean Seaway and after the Messinian Salinity Crisis proliferated in both Mediterranean- and Atlantic-type basins of the Betic-Rifean Domain. The Guadix Basin contributed to the Mediterranean-Atlantic faunal inter-connection through the Betic-Rifean Seaway during the Late Tortonian and facilitated the earliest Pliocene expansion of brachiopods in the Mediterranean.

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