Powell, John H.; Abed, Abdulkader M.; Le Nindre, Yves-Michel. 2014 Cambrian stratigraphy of Jordan. GeoArabia - Middle East Petroleum Geosciences, 19 (3). 81-134.
Abstract
The lower and middle Cambrian succession (Ram Group) in Jordan is described
in lexicon-style format to document an important phase of Earth history following
the uplift and erosion of the Arabian-Nubian Shield (Aqaba Complex) during the
late Neoproterozoic, and younger, but more localised, intrusive and volcanic/
volcaniclastic activity that formed the Araba Complex. The early Cambrian Ram
Unconformity (ca. 530 Ma) marks the base of a predominantly fluvial siliciclastic
succession derived from rapidly eroding Neoproterozoic (including Ediacaran)
basement rocks, but includes a brief, but biostratigraphically significant, sequence
of marine siliciclastics and carbonates, the early mid-Cambrian Burj Formation.
Rapid uplift and erosion of the granitoid basement (Arabian-Nubian Shield or
ANS) resulted in a peneplanation of the Aqaba Complex over millions of years
duration (latest Neoproterozoic to Cambrian) in the Southern Desert of Jordan.
Early Cambrian pebbly sandstones and locally derived conglomerates (Salib
Formation) were deposited on an alluvial plain by high velocity-high discharge,
northward flowing (NNE to NNW) braided rivers, characterised by trough crossbedding
and erosive tabular sets. Brief, and rare, marine influence is represented,
locally, by thin Skolithos-burrowed sandstones.
A regional sea-level rise in the early mid-Cambrian marks a major marine
transgressive-regressive cycle and southward thinning carbonate-siliciclastic
wedge (Burj Formation) widely present in the subsurface across the Arabian
Platform. During deposition of this transgressive marine sequence the
palaeoshoreline was oriented WNW-ESE in southern Jordan. The transgressive
phase (TST) is represented by tidal-dominated siltstones and fine-grained
sandstones (Tayan Member) containing a diverse Cruziana/Rusophycus ichnofaunal
assemblage. The overlying carbonate unit (Numayri Member) represents the
highstand (HST) and maximum marine flooding surface (MFS), and comprises
a carbonate ramp sequence of shelly wackestone, packstone and grainstone with
ooids and oncolites, and a diverse shelly fauna including trilobites, brachiopods
and hyolithids. A return to regressive tidal-influenced sandstone and siltstone
(along with thin carbonates in central Jordan) (Hanneh Member) represents
a regressive wedge (RST) deposited in response to renewed uplift of the ANS.
Trilobites, represented by the Kingaspis campbelli and Redlichops faunules, suggest
a biostratigraphical age of early mid-Cambrian for the carbonate MFS, which
equates approximately to the base of the Cambrian Series 3 (Stage 5). This event
probably represents the Cambrian marine flooding surface Cm20 (approximate
geochronological age of 509 to 505 Ma). South of Feinan, in the Wadi Araba, the
carbonates pass laterally to marine sandstone (Abu Khusheiba Sandstone) with
extensive Skolithos burrows and Cruziana/Rusophycus traces. Traced southwards
(palaeohinterland) the marine influence diminishes, so that the Burj/Abu
Khusheiba units are absent in the Southern Desert.
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