Powell, John H.; Khalid Moh'd, Basem. 2012 Early diagenesis of Late Cretaceous chalk-chert-phosphorite hardgrounds in Jordan : implications for sedimentation on a Coniacian-Campanian pelagic ramp. GeoArabia - Middle East Petroleum Geosciences, 17 (4). 17-38.
Abstract
Hardgrounds and omission surfaces are rare in the predominantly pelagic
and hemi-pelagic chalk, chert and phosphorite lithofacies association that
forms the Upper Cretaceous (Coniacian to Maastrichtian) Belqa Group
succession in central Jordan. However, newly-described hardgrounds of
regional extent at the base of the Dhiban Chalk Member (Campanian) in
central and south Jordan reveal a complex history of sedimentation and early
diagenesis. Following drowning of the Turonian carbonate platform during
the Coniacian, the chalk-chert-phosphorite association was deposited on a
pelagic ramp in fluctuating water depths. The Mujib Chalk and Dhiban Chalk
members represent high-stand sea levels, separated by a regressive, lowstand
chert-rich unit (Tafilah Member). Hardground successions can be
traced over 100 km, and show an early diagenetic history of phosphatisation
and biogenic silica lithification from opal-A to opal-CT and quartz that
resulted in penecontemporaneous chert deformation, followed by submarine
bioerosion and colonisation by corals and/or bivalves. Subsequent deposition
of detrital, remanié phosphatic chalk passing up into pelagic coccolith-rich
ooze reflects a transgressive third-order sea-level rise during the Early
Campanian. These events provide a time-frame for early silica diagenesis and
subsequent hardground development. Regional variations in the hardground
successions and their early diagenesis are attributed to their precursor host
sediment and relative palaeogeographic position on a homoclinal ramp at the
southern margin of the Neo-Tethys Ocean.
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