Abstract

Abstract The Lower Cretaceous deposits of North Africa represent a terrestrial to shallow-marine sandstone-dominated succession often referred to as the ‘Continental Intercalaire’ and Nubian Sandstone informal groups. The upper Barremian Sidi Aich Formation of the Continental Intercalaire is distinguished throughout the Chotts basin of southern Tunisia by sandstone-dominated sequences within conglomerate, calcareous siltstone and palaeosol red bed occurrences. This paper aims to highlight: (1) the facies distribution, internal architecture and depositional environment of the sandbodies; and (2) the origin, spatial distribution and architecture of the red beds that underlined and topped sandbodies. Strata in the Zimlet El Beida anticlinal structure, Chotts basin, offer a good opportunity for detailed field observations and bed-by-bed logging of three representative lithostratigraphic sections. Detailed sedimentological investigation allows the recognition of several lithofacies grouped into three facies associations indicating tidal flat, tidal channel and tidal bar depositional settings characterizing a transgressive tide-dominated estuarine system that developed during an episode of relative sea-level fluctuations in the Early Cretaceous. The high-resolution petrographic, mineralogical and geochemical analyses of the red beds allow the differentiation of three distinct lithofacies sets including: (1) intraformational conglomerates; (2) calcareous siltstones; and (3) palaeosol. Major red beds comprise detrital grains inherited from the host or parent sediment and authigenic minerals (dolomite, calcite and hematite) precipitated during the diagenetic processes. Grain components have been partially or completely cemented and/or replaced by terrestrial phreatic dolomite. The negative δ 13 C and δ 18 O signatures of the dolomite analyses indicate that the dolomitization processes have been influenced by fluctuations of the groundwater table or climate change from semi-arid to semi-humid conditions. This study, therefore, may provide useful data for the better understanding of the internal architecture of the red beds associated with sandbodies that represent the main and significant potential reservoir within the Lower Cretaceous Continental Intercalaire sandstone-dominated groundwater aquifers of the Chotts basin.

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