Abstract

Abstract Defined in the Provence region of France, the rudist-bearing Urgonian Limestone is typical of northern Tethyan shallow-marine carbonate series, and is dated based on benthic fauna and flora, calcareous nannofossils and ammonites. This contribution reports on recent findings that refine the stratigraphy of the Urgonian Limestone in the western Swiss Jura and the Helvetic Alps of Switzerland. In the former location, the high-resolution facies and isotope analysis of samples permits the identification of major periods of subaerial exposure, while a diverse assemblage of calcareous nannofossils indicates a Barremian age for the Urgonian deposits. In the latter location, biostratigraphical data indicate a Late Barremian–Early Aptian age for Urgonian deposits, while the repartition of facies along a proximal-to-distal transect highlights the Late Barremian progradation of the platform. The detailed understanding of the stratigraphy of Urgonian deposits in these regions inscribes them into a broader context that acknowledges palaeoclimatic and palaeoenvironmental conditions. A warmer and more humid climate prone to continental weathering and transport of nutrients to an epicontinental sea characterized the Early Barremian; this was detrimental to the health of carbonate-producing benthic ecosystems. In the Late Barremian, a reduced nutrient supply allowed Urgonian communities to thrive.

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