Abstract

We present a high-resolution record of carbonate depositional facies, biostratigraphy, stable-isotope and elemental geochemistry of the Kharaib and Shu'aiba formations exposed in Ras Al Khaimah, northern UAE. This is the first comprehensive study of these deposits in the northeastern Arabian Peninsula, which have previously been studied extensively in Abu Dhabi, Oman, NE Saudi Arabia, and southwestern Iran, and represents the most detailed biostratigraphic and chemostratigraphic record currently available from a continuous outcrop section of the Arabian Plate. The Barremian–Aptian boundary was approximated based on orbitolinid biostratigraphy, while a subdivision of the Barremain was not possible. There is no biostratigraphic evidence that the Shu'aiba Formation in the section studied ranges into the upper Aptian. Previously well-established depositional sequences of the Barremian–lower Aptian of the Arabian Plate are discussed in the context of carbonate textures, siliciclastic influx, and biotic assemblages. There is a general trend of decreasing siliciclastic components during the Barremian and earliest Aptian, and peaks in siliciclastic influx indicate episodes of maximum accommodation. Palaeogeographic implications of our data for the distribution of intrashelf basins and their connection to Neotethys are discussed. The negative carbon-isotope excursion that globally marks the onset of OAE1a is not evident in our dataset, while the positive excursion at the end of OAE1a is present in the late early Aptian. A comparison of carbon-isotope records across the early Aptian of the Arabian Plate highlights issues of correlations that are predominantly based on chemostratography in diagenetically altered platform carbonates.

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