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- Title
Sponges and corals from the Middle Eocene (Bartonian) marly formations of the Pamplona Basin (Navarre, western Pyrenees): taphonomy, taxonomy, and paleoenvironments.
- Authors
Astibia, Humberto; Elorza, Javier; Pisera, Andrzej; Álvarez-Pérez, German; Payros, Aitor; Ortiz, Silvia
- Abstract
Sponges and corals from the Bartonian marly formations of the Pamplona Basin (South Pyrenean area, Navarre) are described for the first time. The fossiliferous levels correspond respectively to flood-influenced delta-front (Ardanatz Sandstone) and restricted outer-platform (Ilundain Marls Fm.) environments. The fossil sponges exhibit diagenetic fragmentation, but they are often complete specimens. The skeleton appears partially or totally replaced by calcite and/or in some cases large crystals of celestite. Celestite forms relatively early during diagenesis in a dysoxic environment. Neomorphic fibrous quartzine-lutecine spherulites are also present. Hexactinellids and lithistids occur, but the former predominate. The associations include the species Laocoetis samueli, Guettardiscyphia thiolati and/or Pleuroguettardia iberica, cf. Rhizocheton robustus, and two lithistids indet. Corals are present only in the Ardanatz Sandstone. The fossil skeletons are composed of large neomorphic sparry calcite crystals. The assigned species are Stylocoenia taurinensis, Astrocoenia octopartita, Ceratotrochus bodellei, Placosmiliopsis bilobatus, and Desmophyllum castellolense. The sponge and coral taxa are similar to those previously described from other contemporaneous geological formations of the Pyrenean realm. The Pamplona Basin assemblages appear less diverse than those of the Bartonian of the eastern South Pyrenean area, more similar to that of the Eocene of Biarritz (Aquitanian Basin). This lower diversity is not due to a lower-resolution sampling but to taphonomic bias and/or paleoecological differences. The dominance of hexactinellids, erect morphologies, and sedimentological and micropaleontological data show that the sponge communities lived in deep shelfal waters. The corals, mainly associated with levels with high terrigenous content, seem reworked from shallower and more proximal environments.
- Subjects
PAMPLONA (Spain); PYRENEES; FOSSIL sponges; CORALS; CELESTITE; EOCENE Epoch; TAPHONOMY
- Publication
Facies, 2014, Vol 60, Issue 1, p91
- ISSN
0172-9179
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10347-013-0364-2