4.2 Article

Reorganisation of the Triassic stratigraphic nomenclature of northern Switzerland: overview and the new Dinkelberg, Kaiseraugst and Zeglingen formations

期刊

SWISS JOURNAL OF GEOSCIENCES
卷 109, 期 2, 页码 241-255

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SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00015-016-0209-4

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Triassic stratigraphy; Northern Switzerland; Lithostratigraphy; Dinkelberg Formation; Kaiseraugst Formation; Zeglingen Formation

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  1. Swiss Geological Survey

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In the context of the harmonisation of the Swiss stratigraphic scheme (HARMOS project), the stratigraphic nomenclature of the Triassic sedimentary succession of northern Switzerland has been reorganised to six formations (from base to top): Dinkelberg, Kaiseraugst, Zeglingen, Schinznach, Bankerjoch, and Klettgau Formation. The first three are formally introduced in this paper. The Dinkelberg Formation (formerly A << BuntsandsteinA >>) encompasses the siliciclastic, mainly fluvial to coastal marine sediments of Olenekian to early Anisian age. The formation is some 100 m thick in the Basel area and wedges out towards southeast. The Kaiseraugst Formation (formerly A << WellengebirgeA >>) comprises fossiliferous siliciclastic and carbonate sediments documenting a marine transgressive-regressive episode in early Anisian time. It starts with sandstone, dolomite, continues with subtidal limestone and marl and ends with bituminous shale and supratidal dolomite. Thickness decreases from approximately 50 m in the High Rhine area to 10 m in the south and east. In the Lake Constance area, a transition to the siliciclastic marginal facies of the Vindelician High (Eschenbach Formation in Germany) is documented by borehole evidence. The Zeglingen Formation (formerly A << AnhydritgruppeA >>) documents a regressive marine evaporitic megacycle during the Illyrian (late Anisian). At most places, except in far eastern Switzerland, it starts with massive halite deposits. It continues with sulfate and marl sequences and ends with littoral stromatolitic dolomite. In the WSW-ENE trending depot centre total formation thickness is 150 m and more, and thickness of salt layers reaches up to 100 m. In the High Rhine area, the thickness is reduced due to subrecent subrosion. At some places evidence points to syn- to early-post-diagenetic erosion. For practical reasons, the six formations are organised in three lithostratigraphic groups: Buntsandstein Group (with the Dinkelberg Formation), Muschelkalk Group (combining the Kaiseraugst, Zeglingen and Schinznach Formations) and Keuper Group (combining the Bankerjoch and Klettgau Formations).

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