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Benthic foraminifera from the upper Collio Formation (Lower Permian, Lombardy Southern Alps): implications for the palaeogeography of the peri-Tethyan area

✍ Scribed by Dario Sciunnach


Book ID
104463310
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
550 KB
Volume
13
Category
Article
ISSN
0954-4879

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✦ Synopsis


New palaeontological evidence points to a temporary marine transgression in the Early Permian into the Collio Basin, a major palaeogeographic feature of the present‐day Southern Alps. The thick volcaniclastic succession filling the basin (Collio Formation) is widely held as deposited in alluvial to lacustrine settings. Rare calcareous foraminifers were recently found in a single sandstone interval, containing phosphate nodules, from the uppermost Collio Formation. A temporary seaway, necessary for the foraminifera to spread into a continental basin, implies that (i) the Collio Basin lake was not only an intramontane (as commonly viewed), but also a coastal lake, and (ii) its altitude did not exceed the amplitude of a first‐order sea‐level rise, that is, about 100 m. These constraints, along with striking similarities as to tectonic context, accumulation rates and geochemical signature, suggest that the Collio Basin was a California‐type basin, resembling in particular the present‐day Salton Sea (CA, USA).