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Título
Facies and sequence analysis of Miocene open-shelf warm-temperate carbonates in Portimão (Lagos-Portimão Formation, Portugal)
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Heterozoan carbonates
Warm-temperate waters
Open shelf
Cyclicity
Burdigalian
Langhian
Serravallian
Lagos-Portimão
Clasificación UNESCO
2506 Geología
Fecha de publicación
2019
Editor
Springer
Citación
Armenteros, I., Dabrio, C.J., Legoinha, P. et al. Facies and sequence analysis of Miocene open-shelf warm-temperate carbonates in Portimão (Lagos-Portimão Formation, Portugal). Facies 65, 33 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10347-019-0575-2
Resumen
[EN]The Lower–Middle Miocene Lagos-Portimão Formation at Portimão, southern Portugal, consists of three main heterozoan
carbonate facies: mollusc-rich rudstone in a matrix of skeletal packstone/grainstone (MR), fine-to-medium skeletal packstone/
grainstone (SPG), and quartz-rich skeletal packstone (QSP). These facies occur in different arrangements and indicate
deposition on a wave-dominated open shelf with a well-established heterozoan fauna, most likely related to increased trophic
resources where continent supply and upwelling contributed nutrients. These facies form belts inferred to have lain roughly
parallel to the strike lines of the shelf, with the MR occupying the more landward, shallower areas and the SPG and QSP
extending progressively offshore on the open shelf. Bryozoan abundance in the QSP facies indicates a deep setting on the
middle/outer shelf, whereas the absence of rhodalgal components is attributed to a combination of temperature decrease and
seafloor eutrophication during the late Langhian and Serravallian, coeval with the “Middle Miocene climatic cooling”. The
large photosymbiont-bearing foraminifers and the absence of calcareous algae and zooxanthellate corals point to deposition
under warm-temperate conditions. Two main orders of cyclicity are present. Small-scale sequences, 40–60 cm thick, may
represent minor sea-level changes related to fifth-order sequences modulated by (~ 100-kyr) eccentricity forcing. Six largescale
sequences, 3–9 m in thickness, are recognized. Based on LAD and FAD of planktic foraminifers and the occurrence of
two erosive surfaces related to major sea-level falls (Lang2/Ser1 and Ser4/Tor1), five Miocene sequences (Bu, L1, S1, S2,
and S3) are correlated with third-order eustatic cycles.
URI
ISSN
0172-9179
DOI
10.1007/s10347-019-0575-2
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