Abstract

The Apennine Carbonate Platform of southern Italy witnesses nearly 150 Myr (Late Triassic to Late Cretaceous) of shallow-water carbonate sedimentation in the subtropical central Tethys. During this field trip, you will have a look at the stratigraphy and facies across some key intervals of global palaeoenvironmental perturbation and at some important stratigraphic discontinuities in the history of the platform.During the first day, you will visit three localities of the Matese Mts. At San Lorenzello you will look at Milankovitch cyclicity expressed in Lower Cretaceous (Valanginian-Hauterivian) peritidal carbonates. At Pietraroja you will have a look at the foramol facies of the Cusano formation, marking the Early Miocene transgression on top of the eroded Cretaceous substrate. Moving north, at the Regiapiana you will see the abandoned mines that exploited the mid-Cretaceous karst bauxites, which mark a prolonged subaerial exposure. Moreover, you will walk through the Middle Miocene synorogenic history of the platform, from its exposure and erosion in the forebulge to its incipient flexural subsidence, highlighted by the Lower Miocene carbonates of the Cusano formation, to its drowning below the photic zone, marked by a phosphatic hardground overlain by the Orbulina marls of the Longano formation.During the second day, you will head south toward Salerno. In a quarry at Mercato San Severino, you will look at the record of the early Toarcian oceanic anoxic event, marked by the abrupt demise of lithiotid bivalves and dasycladalean algae, the major carbonate producers of the Lower Jurassic carbonate platforms. At the base of Mt Tobenna, you will look at the Aptian Orbitolina level: a marker bed whose palaeoenvironmental meaning has been long debated. From Mt Tobenna you will move south toward Monteforte Cilento where you will look at the record of the Cenomanian-Turonian OAE2 in the Apennine Carbonate Platform.

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