Abstract

In the last 40 years, the stratigraphy of the Upper Jurassic of Europe has received much attention and considerable revision; much of the impetus behind this endeavour has stemmed from the work of the International Subcommission on Jurassic Stratigraphy. The Upper Jurassic Series consists of three stages, the Oxfordian, Kimmeridgian and Tithonian which are further subdivided into substages, zones and subzones, primarily on the basis of ammonites. Regional variations between the Mediterranean, Submediterranean and Subboreal provinces are discussed and correlation possibilities indicated. The durations of the Oxfordian, Kimmeridgian and Tithonian Stages are reported to have been 5.3, 3.4 and 6.5 Ma, respectively. This review of the present status of Upper Jurassic stratigraphy aids identification of a number of problems of subdivision and definition of Upper Jurassic stages; in particular these include correlation of the base of the Kimmeridgian and the top of the Tithonian between Submediterranean and Subboreal Europe. Although still primarily based on ammonite stratigraphy, subdivision of the Upper Jurassic is increasingly being refined by the incorporation of other fossil groups; these include both megafossils, such as aptychi, belemnites, bivalves, gastropods, brachiopods, echinoderms, corals, sponges and vertebrates, and microfossils such as foraminifera, radiolaria, ciliata, ostracodes, dinoflagellates, calcareous nannofossils, charophyaceae, dasycladaceae, spores and pollen. Important future developments will depend on the detailed integration of these disparate biostratigraphic data and their precise combination with the abundant new data from sequence stratigraphy, utilising the high degree of stratigraphic resolution offered by certain groups of fossils. This article also contains some notes on the recent results of magnetostratigraphy and sequence chronostratigraphy.

Highlights

  • In the last 40 years, the stratigraphy of the Upper Jurassic of Europe has received much attention and considerable revision; much of the impetus behind this endeavour has stemmed from the work of the International Subcommission on Jurassic Stratigraphy

  • The Upper Jurassic Series consists of three stages, the Oxfordian, Kimmeridgian and Tithonian which are further subdivided into substages, zones and subzones, primarily on the basis of ammonites

  • Important future developments will depend on the detailed integration of these disparate biostratigraphic data and their precise combination with the abundant new data from sequence stratigraphy, utilising the high degree of stratigraphic resolution offered by certain groups of fossils

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Summary

Arnold Zeiss

In the last 40 years, the stratigraphy of the Upper Jurassic of Europe has received much attention and considerable revision; much of the impetus behind this endeavour has stemmed from the work of the International Subcommission on Jurassic Stratigraphy. The most intractable problems are to find isochronous levels in Submediterranean (and Mediterranean) and Subboreal (and Boreal) Europe for the lower boundary of the Kimmeridgian Stage and for the upper boundary of the Tithonian (Volgian) Stage As the former is of particular significance for Upper Jurassic subdivision and correlation, it will be treated here in some detail (see below). Partly regional compilations and revisions have been published by Sapunov (1979), Donovan et al (1981), Krymholts et al (1988), Malinowska et al (1988), Enay et al (1994) and Schlegelmilch (1994)

Boundaries of the Upper Jurassic Series
Glosense Plicatilis Mariae
Mariae Cordatum Transversarium
Lower boundary
Episcopalis Renggeri
Chronometric data
Guilheradense Platynota Desmoides Ruepellense
What conclusions can be made from all these observations?
Additional remarks on Lower Kimmeridgian correlation
Lower Volgian
Zones and Subzones
Invertebrate megafossil groups
Vertebrate megafossils
Invertebrate microfossils
Plant microfossils
Spores and pollen
Sequence chronostratigraphy
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