Abstract

This paper presents the first integrated regional outcrop-based sedimentological study of the northern Aaiun-Tarfaya Basin located in Morocco (NW Africa). The Lower Cretaceous Tan-Tan Formation has been subdivided into six new members and placed within a sequence stratigraphic framework that includes two incomplete depositional sequences. Strong thickness variations of individual lithostratigraphic units from north to south suggest differential subsidence during sedimentation and/or the existence of major topography on the basal unconformity that the succession onlaps. The results provide valuable insights into the timing of local tectonics in the Western Anti-Atlas and the control on the evolution of the sedimentary system. Deposition of each of these six units is interpreted to be the result of a complex interplay between an overall eustatic sea-level rise during the early Cretaceous, sediment delivery controlled by tectonic movements in the Western Anti-Atlas and Reguibat Shield and periods of differential subsidence in the basin. The results document the style of evolution of a back-stepping wave-dominated system feeding into the Central Atlantic during the passive margin phase. The improved facies and depositional models together with improved understanding of the evolution of the delta have significant implication for exploring the deep-water equivalents offshore.

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