Title of article
Late Ordovician sedimentary environments, glacial cycles, and post-glacial transgression in the Taoudeni Basin, West Africa
Author/Authors
Ghienne، نويسنده , , Jean-François، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
29
From page
117
To page
145
Abstract
The sedimentary record and worldwide palaeontological and isotopic data support the existence of short-lived, latest Ordovician (Hirnantian) ice sheets over western Gondwanaland. Located in the cratonic Taoudeni Basin (West Africa), the study areas are distributed across a 500-km-long profile ranging from ice-proximal to ice-distal depositional conditions (Hodh and Adrar areas, respectively; central and northwestern Mauritania). Glaciation-related but mainly non-glacial deposits form the Tichitt Group, which rests upon Cambrian–Ordovician rocks on top of a basin-wide erosional surface. The glacial record consists of depositional successions bound by unconformities of glacial origin in ice-proximal areas, or of sub-aerial origin in ice-distal areas. Facies associations reflect a variety of environments (braided streams, flood-dominated alluvial plains, delta plain to delta slope, tidal or storm-wave influenced shallow-marine settings). The upper bounding surface of the Tichitt Group generally corresponds to a wave–ravinement surface, overlain by uppermost Ordovician to lower Silurian shales. Four, inter-regionally distributed units are vertically superimposed and laterally juxtaposed. A unit is a hundreds of kilometres long sedimentary body, up to 100 m thick, which is laterally discontinuous as it typically infills palaeodepressions or palaeovalleys. In ice-proximal areas, aggrading fluvial deposits are identified. Coarse-grained braided stream deposits, including glacial surfaces related to minor glacial advances, predominate upstream. Downstream, finer-grained flood-dominated fluvial deposits are identified. In ice-distal areas, thick fluvial-dominated delta sediments are deposited. Each of the four units, of climatic significance, and built under high accommodation conditions, records a recession stage of the northern Gondwana ice sheet following a major glacial advance. The overall backstepping of the glacial units characterises the large-scale depositional architecture. The fourth unit, characterised by glaciomarine deposits in ice-proximal areas, and non-glacial, bioturbated storm-dominated deposits in ice-distal areas, records the final retreat of the northern Gondwana ice sheet. The lower bounding surface of this later glacial unit marks a Late Hirnantian major transgressive surface of a Late Ordovician–Silurian relative sea-level rise starting before the glaciation.
Keywords
Gondwana , glaciation , Ordovician , West Africa , Mauritania , Silurian
Journal title
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Record number
2290459
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