Abstract

Investigations performed along the Middle Jurassic Alpine Tethyan unconformity surface of E Sardinia evidenced an elaborate surface that developed over older Late Paleozoic to Triassic rocks. This surface is covered by the Middle Jurassic Genna Selole Fm, which has different sedimentological and petrographical characteristics and thicknesses according to its location and the morphology and evolution of the lower substrate. An analysis of the unconformity and the rocks located above and below it revealed that a tectonic high emerged early during the Middle Jurassic from E Sardinia to Corsica in response to the extensional tectonics leading to the Alpine Tethys opening. This high was almost immediately fragmented in secondary blocks, and an irregular morphology of minor lows and highs thus formed upon it. The high was, on the whole, subjected to strong erosion. Its deposits accumulated along the rims of the high and in the lows of its surface, smoothing the landscape and preparing it for the marine transgression that followed. The tectonic high rapidly collapsed starting from its North side as show the older age of the marine deposits first investigated. A similar rise-and-collapse tectosedimentary evolution can be seen in some of the W Mediterranean domains next to the Sardinia-Corsica block. Indeed, they are all related to the Alpine Tethys opening and may mark a discontinuous high separating the Paleoeuropa from the Tethyan domain. Consequently, a comparison with all of these domains has been attempted by trying to set the Sardinia-Corsica block in this extensional margin scenario.

Highlights

  • The goal of this paper is to investigate the evolution and significance of the Alpine Tethyan unconformity in Sardinia, and to unravel the evolving paleoenvironments and paleomorphology of the transgressed Middle Jurassic landscape

  • During the late Early- Middle Jurassic, extensional tectonics developed in the W Mediterranean area

  • In the Sardinia-Corsica block, which is located Westwards of the Alpine Tethys, a tectonic high extending from E Sardinia to Corsica rose and sunk during Aalenian to Bathonian times

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A Middle Jurassic to Cretaceous sedimentary cover, about 1000 m thick crops out in E Sardinia (nearly 170 km, Fig. 1) (Amadesi et al, 1960; Assorgia et al, 1974; Assorgia and Gandolfi, 1975; Dieni and Massari, 1985a; Costamagna and Barca, 2004; Costamagna et al, 2007; Jadoul et al, 2010; Casellato et al, 2012; Costamagna, 2013a; Dieni et al, 2013). More than seventy stratigraphic sections across the unconformity have been sampled and analyzed (Fig. 1) This dataset served to reconstruct the evolution of the E Sardinia-Corsica high by highlighting the influence of tectonics on sedimentation and evidencing the morphological profile of E Sardinia in early Middle Jurassic times. This produced a relative clear chronology of the development stages of the high that range from a continental (erosive to depositional) landscape to a transitional environment and, to the marine Tethyan transgression. Jadoul et al (2010) noted that “the scarce biostratigraphic control does not permit a precise chronostratigraphic assessment of the marine transgression ruling the start of the carbonate sedimentation in the investigated area.”

Geological setting
Middle Jurassic Alpine Tethyan unconformity
Facies and areal variations of the transgressive Genna Selole Fm
Synsedimentary tectonics
Petrography of the Genna Selole Fm
Corsica
Western Sardinia
Discussion: the Eastern Sardinia-Corsica High
Comparisons with Middle Jurassic close areas
Southern France
Brianconnais domain
Calabria – Peloritani area
Conclusions

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.