Abstract

Karst bauxites mark episodic exhumation of carbonate platforms, thus providing key information for basin analysis and paleoclimate processes at the regional to continental scale. Most karst bauxite deposits of SE France lie between Jurassic platform carbonates in the footwall and Upper Cretaceous marine to continental sediments in the hanging wall. These deposits delineate a stratigraphic gap coeval with the Durance extensional tectonics, which led to the separation of the Vocontian and South Provence Basins, and shaped the junction between the Alpine Tethys and the Pyrenean Rift.Our new mineralogical and geochemical data show that SE France karst bauxites were affected by in-situ weathering and alteration in conjunction to sedimentary reworking. Statistical analysis of geochemical data indicates that bauxite deposits have a similar chemical footprint, likely pointing to a common and long-lasting bauxitization process. New U-Pb zircon data from the Provence deposits confirm that the source material for the SE France bauxites is to be primarily found in the Hercynian basement. The data suggest the presence of an additional exotic zircon source deriving either from Avalonia and/or Baltica. The comparison of the new U-Pb zircon data with those on coeval bauxites evidences a marked difference between the SE France and the Sardinian deposits. This difference indicates diversification in the detritus provenance of the two areas since the Lower Cretaceous, setting the bauxites of SE France and Sardinia in lateral continuity with the bauxites occurring on the two opposite margins of the Pyrenean Rift, and supporting the development of these deposits on the shoulders of the rift-related basin formed at the eastern termination of the Pyrenean Rift.

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