4.7 Article

Late Permian to early Middle Triassic palaeoenvironmental reconstructions of the High Atlas, Morocco: Geodynamic and climate implications in the intertropical western Peri-Tethyan domain

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DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2023.111809

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Permian-Triassic unconformity; Palaeosol analysis; Alluvial fan; Aeolian and lacustrine; Marrakech High Atlas; Argana

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Based on detailed sedimentological and palaeosol analysis, this study characterizes the depositional environment and climate evolution from the late Permian to the early Middle Triassic. The results show that the late Permian in Morocco was dominated by a distal fluvial fan environment under arid to semi-arid conditions, while the early Triassic featured aeolian deflation lag, debris flow lobes, and sheetflood ephemeral alluvial fan deposits. The Marrakech High Atlas basins were characterized by well-developed aeolian dunes in an alluvial fan environment. The study also finds that there was a common climate evolution in Morocco during the Lower Triassic until a newly defined angular unconformity.
This study characterizes the depositional environment and climate evolution from the late Permian to the early Middle Triassic, based on detailed sedimentological and palaeosol analysis. Sequence stratigraphy and palae-oenvironmental reconstructions were used to define the Permian-Triassic (P-T) evolution of the High Atlas basins as well as to make a comparison with European basins. The late Permian in Morocco is dominated by distal fluvial fan environment, under arid to semi-arid paleo-climate conditions. Above the P-T unconformity (BS1), the Lower Triassic deposits, record a similar climate evolution from arid to subhumid conditions. In the Argana Basin, the Early Triassic starts by an aeolian deflation lag, followed by stacked debris flow lobes and sheetflood ephemeral alluvial fan deposits, showing immature to locally mature calcretes. The Marrakech High Atlas basins are further characterized by well-developed aeolian dunes in alluvial fan environment. These arid environments evolve through time from proximal to distal deposits, as a retrogradational trend, until well-developed floodplain or lacustrine deposits under semi-arid to subhumid climate (maximum flooding surface, MFS). From MFS, the evolution from distal to proximal environments, testified the progradational trend which is capped by a newly defined angular unconformity (BS2). Above this tectonically induced BS2, the sedimentary section, dated as Anisian is characterized by palaeoenvironments that include meandering river fluvial packages deposited in a semi-arid floodplain. Basin configuration, border fault direction, palaeoenvironments and palaeocurrents recorded in the Argana Basin confirm an independent system, separate from the Marrakech High Atlas (MHA) area during the Triassic. Above BS1, remnant topographies resulted in discrete catchment and discrete drainage systems are evidenced by palaeocurrent and palaeowind measurements controlled by border faults. Palaeoenvironment reconstructions show that the MHA was made up of numerous independent basins during the Early Triassic and the remnant topographies are progressively infilled until BS2. After the BS2, the palaeo-drainage became axial and basins were probably connected in the MHA. Above the P-T unconformity, a common climate evolution is observed in Morocco during the Lower Triassic until BS2, which could correspond to the European Hardegsen unconformity. The sedimentation record shows a similar change in climate and geodynamics to that recorded from both Europe and Morocco.

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