| Literature DB >> 29988203 |
Njon Olivier Anoh1, Mbanda L Njoke2, Ngoe D Elangwe3.
Abstract
Late Cretaceous-Paleocene foraminiferans and palynomorphs were recovered from the upper section of the Djega outcrop in the Rio del Rey Basin. Only a few planktonic foraminiferan species of the genera Heterohelix and Hedbergella were recovered among an assemblage dominated by calcareous and agglutinated benthonics. Marine dinocysts are curiously absent from among the palynomorph assemblage, which consists dominantly of pollen grains from land plants (angiosperms and gymnosperms) and pteridophytic spores, together with a few fungal remains. Two benthonic foraminiferal assemblages that include the Campanian-Maastrichtian Bolivina afra-Haplophragmoides talokensis and the Paleocene Anomalinoides umboniferus-Eponides pseudoelevatus are well established at this outcrop. The palynomorphs include a few typical Late Cretaceous and typical Paleogene species, while the majority are long ranging forms that straddle the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary. The foraminiferal and palynomorph biostratigraphic distributions permitted us to recognize the succession of Campanian-Maastrichtian and Paleocene strata and the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary for the first time in this basin. Lithofacies change from a monotonous thick pile of shales below, succeeded by sandstones, frequently alternating with mudstone, above. This indicates a general fall in sea level during the Early Paleocene earlier reported within this subregion, and the boundary marks the start of the out building of the Niger Delta which the Tertiary Rio del Rey Basin is part of. Both microfossils and lithofacies analyses aided the reconstruction of an open marine, probably middle to inner neritic shallow and transitional intertidal paleodepositional environments for the sediments exposed at this outcrop.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29988203 PMCID: PMC5996429 DOI: 10.1155/2018/6126528
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
Figure 1A regional map of the Gulf of Guinea showing the spatial relationship between the Rio del Rey and other coastal sedimentary basins within the subregion.
Figure 2Map of the Rio del Rey Basin indicating the Illor-Dibonda area in the northern part of the basin.
Figure 3The lithostratigraphic framework of the Rio del Rey Basin with the Cretaceous section still under reconstruction.
Figure 4(A) The upper part of the Djega outcrop showing the frequently alternating beds of sandstones and mudstones. (B–F) show the various lithofacies of the upper part of the outcrop as indicated in (A). (G) A shale bed, iron stained, characteristic of the lower part of the Djega outcrop. (H) A bed of concretion, sometimes nodular frequently interbedding the shales.
Figure 5A composite lithologic log of the section of the Djega outcrop under study showing the position of the K/Pg, boundary.
Figure 6(a) Some common planktic and benthic foraminiferal forms recovered from the Djega outcrop represented by line drawings, not to scale: 1-2 Pseudotextularia elegans (1 side view, 2 edge view), 3-4 Hedbergella planispira (3 umbilical side, 4 spiral side), 5-6 H. monmouthensis (5 umbilical side, 6 spiral side), 7 H. holmdelensis (side view), 8–11 Bolivina afra cf Afrobolivina afra (8 a megalospheric form, probably a juvenile, 9-10 side views, 11 apertural view), 12 and 13 Bolivina explicate (side views), 14-15 Praebulimina robusta (14 side view, 15 edge view), 16 Praebulimina laddi (edge view), 17 Orthokarstenia ewaldi (side view), 18 Praebulimina lata (side view), 19 Orthokarstenia parva (side view), 20-21 Lenticulina secans (20 side view, 21 edge view), 22-23 Planulina nacatochensis (22 spiral side, 23 umbilical side), 24 Gavelinella guineana (spiral side), 25-26 Nonionella robusta (25 spiral side, 26 umbilical side), 27 Ammobaculites subcretacea (side view), 28-29 Ammobaculites coprolithiformis (side views), 30 Haplophragmoides sp. (umbilical side), 31 Epinoides sp. (side view), and 32 and 33 Anomalinoides umboniferus; (a) spiral view and (b) umbilical view. (b) Photo micrographs of some palynomorphs recovered from the Djega outcrop; 1: Asplenium sp., 2: Syncolporites marginatus, 3: Syncolporites marginatus, 4: Longapertites marginatus, 5: Ctenolophonidites costatus, 6: Retidiporites magdeleinsis, 7: Retidiporites magdelensis, 8: Acrostichum aureum, 9: Klukisporites pseudoreticulatus, 10: Cyathidites sp., 11: Cyathidites sp., 12: Laevigatosporites ovatus.
Summary of the lithostratigraphic description and inferred depositional environment for sediments studied.
| Facies code | Facies name | Lithology | Structure/fossil/mineralogy | Depositional setting/Environment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sm | Massive sandstones | Fine-medium moderately to well sorted quartz arenite with sub angular to sub-rounded grains | Massive, over 90% quartz, >5% feldspars, micas and rock fragments. Glauconite is present | Shoreface setting/Shallow marine environment |
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| Sw | Wave rippled sandstone | Fine-medium moderately well sorted sandstones with sub angular to sub-rounded grains | over 90% quartz, >5% feldspars, micas and rock fragments. Glauconite and wave ripple marks present | Flood-tidal to ebb-tidal deposits/Lagoonal to shallow marine environment |
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| Smc | Massive Sandstone with mudclast | Fine-medium moderately to well sorted sandstones with sub angular to sub-rounded grains, hosting grey to black millimetric mudstone fragments | Massive, with sharp bed boundaries | Flood-tidal to ebb-tidal deposits/Lagoonal to shallow marine environment |
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| SM | Sandstone-Mudstone couplets | Sandstone with intercalations of thin laminations of dark grey to black mudstones | Parallel laminations with sharp bed boundaries | Wash-over, Flood-tidal to ebb-tidal deposits/Lagoonal to shallow marine deposits |
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| Fm | Massively bedded shale | Dark to dark-grey with iron stained colorations. Nodular and concretion beds at irregular intervals | Poorly bedded with visible tiny pyrite crystals. Fish head and turtle-like fossils | Deep Marine environment |
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| Fl | Parallel thin-laminated shale | Dark grey to black highly fissile shale. Forms intervals that range in thickness from 20 cm to 2.5 m | Parallel laminations/bedding, contains tiny pyrite crystals. Fish head and turtle-like fossils, as well as bivalve moulds present | Deep Marine environment |