Abstract

The Terre noires are monotonous sedimentary deposits comprising thick, dark marls and thin carbonaceous layers. They constitute a lithostratigraphical group known in the major part of the SE French Basin. In the East of this basin this group, dated from late Bajocian to mid Oxfordian, is well developed; on the other hand on the West, it is reduced until it disappears locally on the border of the Massif Central. In the East, the succession is precisely dated by ammonites, whereas in the west, ammonites are not consistently present, and do not permit the same precision. Analysis of dinoflagellate cyst assemblages, at the Callovian-Oxfordian boundary, show that it is possible to correlate the eastern to the western succession. Two marker species allow the correlation of four outcrop sections. The first index, Wanaea fimbriata, is well known; its first appearance datum is exactly at the Callovian–Oxfordian limit in the Boreal and Mediterranean realms. It is the index taxon of the palynological parazone Wfi. The second index, Stephanelytron ceto, an endemic taxon in the SE French, has its last appearance datum within the Scarburghense horizon, the second subzone of the oldest zone of the Oxfordian (Mariae zone). The first section studied was sampled in the east part of the basin (Hautes Alpes department). It corresponds to the maxima of marine deposits and is used as the palynostratigraphical reference. The three other sections analyzed, sampled in the west part of the basin (Ardèche department) where marine deposits are more condensed, are correlated and dated due to dinoflagellate cyst markers observed in the reference section. These results indicate that dinoflagellate cysts are a reliable correlation tool. Batiacasphaera rugosa (Courtinat, 1980) nov. comb is proposed.

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