Costras carbonatadas en la sucesión aluvial distal eocena de la Formación Hamada de Boudenib II al sur del Alto Atlas (Marruecos)

2003; Issue: 34 Linguagem: Inglês

ISSN

2173-6545

Autores

Ildefonso Armenteros Armenteros, Mohamed Ben Brahim, José Antonio Blanco Sánchez, Pedro Huerta Hurtado, Mercedes Suárez,

Tópico(s)

Archaeological and Geological Studies

Resumo

On the southern edge of the High Atlas Mountains of Morocco, the Tertiary continental deposits form extensive tablelands, the so-called Hamada, in the Boudenib area. Two units have been defined in the Paleogene: a Lower unit Hamada de Boudenib I (lower Eocene) and an Upper one Hamada de Boudenib II of Middle/Upper Eocene age. This latter lies unconformably and covers most of the Lower unit; generally dips towards the south and thickens in this same direction. Their central basin deposits essentially consist of mudstones and sandy mudstones, deposited in distal areas (alluvial plain) of alluvial fans with sparse channels and ephemeral carbonate ponding. Intense processes of crust formation produced several facies of calcretes and dolocretes and the ubiquitous palygorskite. The duricrust features indicate that they were formed by continuous processes of carbonate precipitation in the vadose and capillary zones of soil profiles, developed on the alluvial plain, with alternative wetting and drying episodes in a semiarid climate.

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