4.3 Article

New contributions to the palaeoenvironmental framework of the Los Molles Formation (Early-to-Middle Jurassic), Neuquen Basin, based on palynological data

Journal

FACIES
Volume 66, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10347-020-00607-8

Keywords

Los Molles Formation; Early-Middle Jurassic; Palaeoceanographic changes; Neuquen Basin; Organic-walled marine microplankton

Funding

  1. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas (CONICET) [PIP20130100279, P-UE 2016-22920160100047CO]
  2. Secretaria General de Ciencia y Tecnologia de la Universidad Nacional del Sur (SEGCyT) [PGI-24/H142]

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Being the main oil-bearing basin of Argentina, the Neuquen Basin contains a well-documented stratigraphic record of continental and marine sedimentation during the Jurassic and Cretaceous in the western margin of Gondwana. Marine sedimentation started in the Early Jurassic with the deposition of the offshore to prodelta shales of the Los Molles Formation, the basal unit of the Cuyo Group. A palynological study of outcrop samples of the Los Molles Formation at two localities, Puente Picun Leufu, southern Neuquen Basin, and Cordillera del Viento, central basin area, is presented. The palynological evidence allows inferring two different palaeoceanographic contexts during the deposition of the Los Molles Fm. At Puente Picun Leufu and the lower part of the Cordillera del Viento localities, the record of acritarchs and prasinophytes suggests a stratified water column, suboxic-to-anoxic bottom conditions, and a reduced salinity within the photic zone, associated with a marginal marine environment under restricted oceanic circulation. These conditions would have last at least until the Early Bajocian. Conversely, at the middle and mainly the upper part of Cordillera del Viento locality, the predominance of dinocysts in the assemblages indicates a hydrographically unstable shelf (non-stratified water mass column) with well-oxygenated bottom waters developed under open-marine settings with non-restricted oceanic circulation. The abundance and diversity of dinocyst assemblages are comparable with those observed in the Late Callovian Lotena Formation. These evidences suggest an open oceanic circulation due to the establishment of different seaways in the Neuquen Basin, during the final accumulation of the Los Molles Formation (Early Callovian).

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