4.6 Article

The Messinian erosional surface and early Pliocene reflooding in the Alboran Sea: New insights from the Boudinar basin, Morocco

Journal

SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY
Volume 333, Issue -, Pages 115-129

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.sedgeo.2015.12.014

Keywords

Alboran Sea; Morocco; Boudinar basin; Messinian Salinity Crisis; Zanclean flooding

Categories

Funding

  1. French CNRS programs Actions Marges-MedOcc chantier Alboran
  2. scientific cooperation French-Morocco program PHC [MA/12/274]
  3. European FP7-IRSES-MEDYNA project

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New investigations in the Neogene Boudinar basin (Morocco) provide new information about the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC) and Zanclean reflooding in the southern part of the Alboran realm (westernmost Mediterranean). Based on a new field, sedimentological and palaeontological analyses, the age and the geometry of both the Messinian erosional surface (MES) and the overlying deposits have been determined. The MES is of late Messinian age and was emplaced in subaerial settings. In the Boudinar basin, a maximum of 200 m of Miocene sediments was eroded, including late Messinian gypsum blocks. The original geometry of the MES is preserved only when it is overlain by late Messinian continental deposits, conglomeratic alluvial fans or lacustrine marly sediments. These sediments are interpreted as indicators of the sea-level fall during the MSC. Elsewhere in the basin, the contact between late Messinian and early Pliocene deposits is a low-angle dipping, smooth surface that corresponds to the early Pliocene transgression surface that subsequently re-shaped the regressive MES. The early Pliocene deposits are characterized by: (i) their onlap onto either the basement of the Rif chain or the late Miocene deposits; (ii) lagoonal deposits at the base to offshore marls and sands at the top (earliest Pliocene; 5.33-5.04 Ma interval; foraminifer zone PLI); (iii) marine recovery occurring in the 532-5.26 Ma interval; and (iv) the change from lagoonal to offshore environments occurring within deposits tens of metres thick. This information indicates that at least the end of the reflooding period was progressive, not catastrophic as previously thought. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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