
Microfacies and biostratigraphy of an Upper Triassic Dachstein limestone fore-reef block in the Jurassic Sirogojno carbonate-clastic Mélange (Zlatibor Mt., SW Serbia)
Author(s) -
Oliver Zöhrer,
HansJürgen Gawlick,
George Pleş,
Milan Sudar,
Divna Jovanović
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
geološki anali balkanskoga poluostrva/geološki anali balkanskog poluostrva
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2406-0747
pISSN - 0350-0608
DOI - 10.2298/gabp210518003z
Subject(s) - geology , ecological succession , paleontology , reef , clastic rock , facies , carbonate , calcareous , biostratigraphy , carbonate platform , sedimentary rock , micrite , oceanography , ecology , biology , materials science , structural basin , metallurgy
In the late Middle to early Late Jurassic carbonate-clastic Sirogojno Melange in the Zlatibor Mountain there is one roughly 35 m thick overturned block with an intact Late Triassic fore-reefal Dachstein Limestone succession studied for its biostratigraphic age, content and microfacies characteristics. The succession starts with coarse-grained rudstones followed by meter-sized reefal blocks intercalated in partly layered resedimented grainstones and packstones with abundant reef-building organisms like calcareous sponges, corals and encrusting organisms. Inside this part of the succession open-marine influenced layers are rare. The succession continues with a partly turbiditic sequence and chaotic rudstones, densely packed with reef-derived material like broken reefbuilding organisms and shallow-water material like gastropods, bivalves and foraminifers. Grainstones with clear open-marine influence (e.g., thin-shelled bivalves, crinoids, conodonts) appear in between those rudstones, in cases lumachelle layers be composed of halobiids were deposited. To the end of the succession some layers show turbiditic bedding with mixed shallow-water and deep-marine grains and organisms, i.e. filaments and crinoids. On base of conodonts, foraminifers, calcareous algae, holothurians and halobiids throughout the whole studied succession, a middle Norian (Alaunian) to Rhae tian 1, most probably a late Norian (Sevatian) age can be assigned to this fore-reefal Dachstein Limestone succession, with a similar sedimentation pattern like Late Triassic Dachstein fore-reef limestone facies, e.g., in the Northern Calcareous Alps or the eastern Southern Alps. The study of this block in the Sirogojno Melange closes an important gap in knowledge about the extent, facies and stratigraphy of the Dachstein Carbonate Platform evolution in the Dinarides.