Abstract

In the Eastern part of the Pyrenees, the Cucugnan area (Southern Corbieres), at the boundary between the North and the Sub-Pyrenean Zones, shows different outcrops of “Garumnian” fluvio-lacustrine sediments, Latest Cretaceous to Paleocene in age. These deposits are generally interpreted as specific units involved in one of the main Eocene crustal faults named the North Pyrenean Frontal Thrust (NPFT). Nevertheless, in 1967, Mattauer and Proust considered that the “Garumnian” Cucugnan formation overlapped unconformably the North and Sub-Pyrenean structures and gave evidence for a Late Cretaceous main tectonic phase. This new geodynamic interpretation, which gives to the Eocene phase little influence, has been recently supported by two independent articles (Charriere & Durand-Delga, 2004; Combes, Peybernes & Fondecave-Wallez,, 2004). Both papers indicate an angular unconformity between the Cucugnan “Garumnian” Fm and the underlying North Pyrenean Triassic Fm and the Sub-Pyrenean Albian Fm. In addition to this conclusion, Combes et al. (2004) consider that marine, transgressive Dano-Selandian deposits, including breccias and hemipelagites, are associated to continental Cucugnan sediments, both to the South, in the North-Pyrenean Galamus mountain, and to the North East, in the Sub-Pyrenean Tauch block.

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