Abstract

Dark-gray oolitic units characterized by oversized ooids with primary radial calcite fabrics occur in the interior of the Late Jurassic Late Tithonian, Adriatic Platform, a large Mesozoic, Tethyan isolated platform in Croatia. They differ from open-marine, platform-margin ooid grainstones in their dark color, cerebroid outlines, broken and recoated grains, abundant inclusions, highly restricted biota, and lack of cross-stratifiThey have been interpreted as being of vadose origin (“vadoids”) at tops of upward-shallowing parasequences. However, detailed sections show that most oolitic units occur at bases of precessional parasequences, overlying erosional surfaces on fenestral carbonates. The oolitic units are similar to quiet-water ooids that form today in low-energy settings. They developed in an arid climate during initial transgression of supratidal fl ats, along lowenergy shores seaward of tidal fl ats, and along the margins of restricted lagoons and intertidal ponds. Superimposed fenestral fabrics, meniscus micrite cements, and grain breakage occurred as they aggraded to high-tide level and were subjected to wetting and drying, thermal expansion and contraction, and wind transport. They migrated landward with transgression, forming extensive sheets, and were overlain by subtidal lagoonal facies that shallow up into fenestral carbonates. These distinctive facies may have been overlooked in the geological record, or their geological distribution requires juxtaposition of calcite seas, high-calcite supersaturation states, arid climate, and presence of fl at-topped carbonate platforms in a greenhouse world.

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