Abstract
The depositional environment and high-order stratigraphic architecture of the Eocene Dernah Formation in N Cyrenaica Promontory, NE Libya, were interpreted through detailed sedimentary facies and sequence stratigraphic analyses of four measured sections located several kilometers apart. Five distinct lithofacies were delineated based on variations in lithology, grain composition, fossil content, texture, color, and stacking pattern. Dernah Formation mainly contains nummulitic limestone with a noticeable amount of Discocyclina and rare gastropods. The extraordinary presence of Nummulites indicates shallow-marine carbonate settings, perhaps a Nummulite bank environment, where the reworking of sediments by wave- or tide-induced currents and storms is high. Two complete fifth-order depositional sequences were defined. Each sequence was subdivided into a transgressive and a regressive hemicycle based on the vertical lithological variation and stacking pattern of facies. We conclude that each sequence may have formed as a result of a fifth-order sea-level cycle. This study reconstructs a three-dimensional model for the Nummulite bank environment in the Mediterranean region, which can serve as an analog for similar depositional systems elsewhere.
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