Title of article :
Stratigraphic evolution of a fluvial–eolian succession: The example of the Upper Jurassic—Lower Cretaceous Guará and Botucatu formations, Paraná Basin, Southernmost Brazil
Author/Authors :
Scherer، نويسنده , , Claiton M.S. and Lavina، نويسنده , , Ernesto L.C. and Silveira، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
10
From page :
475
To page :
484
Abstract :
The Guarل and Botucatu formations comprise an 80 to 120 m thick continental succession that crops out on the western portion of the Rio Grande do Sul State (Southernmost Brazil). The Guarل Formation (Upper Jurassic) displays a well-defined facies shift along its outcrop belt. On its northern portion it is characterised by coarse-grained to conglomeratic sandstones with trough and planar cross-bedding, as well as low-angle lamination, which are interpreted to represent braided river deposits. Southwards these fluvial facies thin out and interfinger with fine- to medium-grained sandstones with large-scale cross-stratification and horizontal lamination, interpreted as eolian dune and eolian sand sheets deposits, respectively. The Botucatu Formation is characterised by large-scale cross-strata formed by successive climbing of eolian dunes, without interdune and/or fluvial accumulation (dry eolian system). The contact between the Guarل and the Botucatu formations is delineated by a basin-wide deflation surface (supersurface). The abrupt change in the depositional conditions that took place across this supersurface suggests a major climate change, from semi-arid (Upper Jurassic) to hyper-arid (Lower Cretaceous) conditions. A rearrangement of the Paranل Basin depocenters is contemporaneous to this climate change, which seems to have changed from a more restrict accumulation area in the Guarل Formation to a wider sedimentary context in the Botucatu Formation.
Keywords :
Upper Jurassic , climate change , Fluvial–eolian deposits , Southern Paran? Basin
Journal title :
Gondwana Research
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Gondwana Research
Record number :
2363479
Link To Document :
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