Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 5 de 5
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Int J Earth Sci ; 113(2): 245-283, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38500652

ABSTRACT

One of the most remarkable features of the central Northern Calcareous Alps (Eastern Alps, Austria) is the widespread presence of Upper Triassic deep-water carbonates (the Hallstatt facies) and Permo-Triassic evaporites resting on deep-water Middle Jurassic strata and their underlying Upper Triassic shallow-water carbonate platform successions. The Hallstatt facies and accompanying evaporites have been classically interpreted to originate either from a location south of the time-equivalent carbonate platforms, or to have been deposited in deeper water seaways within the broad platform domain. To date, this dispute has been addressed mostly through the analysis of Triassic and Jurassic facies distribution in map view, which, however, is subject to some degree of ambiguity and subjectivity. In this contribution we present, for the first time, sequentially restored regional cross-sections through the central Northern Calcareous Alps to understand the implications of the contrasting paleogeographic models. We present (a) an interpretation based on a highly allochthonous origin of the Triassic deep-water units and (b) an interpretation based on their relative autochthony in which we incorporate the potential influence of salt tectonics in the central NCA. The restored cross-sections provide a framework within which the alternative scenarios and their paleogeographic implications can be better understood. Through this analysis we propose that salt tectonics in the central NCA can provide a valid explanation for apparent inconsistencies in the relative autochthony scenario and thus constitutes a reasonable alternative to the currently accepted allochthony scenario.

2.
Sedimentology ; 69(5): 2099-2130, 2022 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36248773

ABSTRACT

Whereas deposits of extremely-rapid, 'catastrophic' mass wastings >105 m3 in volume (for example, the Marocche di Dro rock avalanche in the Southern Alps and the Flims rockslide in the Western Alps) are easily recognized by their sheer mass and blocky surface, the identification of fossil catastrophic mass wastings partly removed by erosion must be based on deposit characteristics. Herein, a 'fossil' (pre-last glacial) rock avalanche, previously interpreted as either a till or debris flow, is described. The deposit, informally called 'Rubble Breccia', is located in the intramontane Campo Imperatore halfgraben that is bounded by a master fault with up to ca 900 m topographic throw. Based on documentation from field to thin section, and by comparative analysis with post-glacial rock avalanches, tills and debris flows, the Rubble Breccia is reinterpreted as a rock avalanche. The Rubble Breccia consists of an extremely-poorly sorted, disordered mixture of angular clasts from sand to block size. Many clasts show fitted subclast boundaries in crackle, jigsaw and mosaic fabrics, as diagnostic of catastrophic mass wasting deposits. Intercalated layers of angular to well-rounded clasts of coarse sand to fine pebble size, and deformed into open to recumbent folds, may represent shear belts folded during terminal avalanche propagation. The clast spectrum of the Rubble Breccia - mainly shallow-water bioclastic limestones, Saccocoma wackestones and other deep-water limestones and dolostones - is derived from the front range along the northern margin of the basin. Calcite cement found within the Rubble Breccia was dated with the U/Th disequilibrium method to 124.25 ± 2.76 ka bp, providing an ante-quam age constraint to the rock avalanche event. Because catastrophic mass wasting is a common erosional process, fossil deposits thereof should be more widespread than have been identified to date, although this may be a consequence of misidentification. The criteria outlined here provide a template to identify fossil catastrophic mass wasting deposits of any age.

3.
Nova Hedwigia ; 112(1-2): 17-48, 2021 Feb 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35282312

ABSTRACT

It is often difficult to decide which cyanobacteria found in endolithic habitats of calcite spring-tufa deposits are present as ephemeral components of the biota or are persistent, structural elements. To answer this question, we repeatedly studied two microhabitats of contrasting calcareous tufa springs in the European Alps. Pigment extracts, fluorescence probe measurements of in situ samples and traditional microscopy confirmed the dominance of cyanobacteria over eukaryotic algae and their viability in both microhabitats. Spring Site 1 (Laas, Northern Italy) is characterized by a highly variable, moist to dry and sun-exposed waterfall tufa consisting of fibrous calcite. A segment of these deposits in the lateral flank of a grotto contained dark endolithic layers in dim light, 1-2 mm below the surface, where aggregated cyanobacterial cells were dominant but not directly attached to calcites, a potential sign of gentle endolithic dissolution rather than calcite precipitation induced by cyanobacteria. Site 2 (Mühlau, Austria), in contrast, is a moss-tufa microhabitat associated with a seepage spring situated in a shady gorge, where the targeted stromatolites consisted of bark-like sheets of friable, orange to light-brown when wet (drying violet) 'styrofoam'- like aggregates of minute crystallites on the day-light exposed surfaces. These calcites were observed to nucleate directly on external sheaths of viable cyanobacteria trichomes. A polyphasic approach including LM, SEM, TEM exhibited a number of identical but also some divergent cyanobacteria of which two key taxa were specific for each of the two microhabitats (Nostoc and Pseudoscytonema at Sites 1 and 2 respectively). Both cyanobacterial communities characterised, by the cloning of 16S rDNA showed a dominance of mostly unknown and partly divergent filamentous cyanobacteria assigned to the order of Synechococcales. Our microhabitat study of alpine crenal calcites highlights the rather divergent biotic responses of cyanobacteria within spring tufa deposits.

4.
Sci Total Environ ; 568: 624-637, 2016 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26953141

ABSTRACT

Springs are biodiversity hotspots and unique habitats that are threatened, especially by water overdraft. Here we review knowledge on ambient-temperature (non-geothermal) freshwater springs that achieve sufficient oversaturation for CaCO3 -by physical CO2 degassing and activity of photoautotrophs- to deposit limestone, locally resulting in scenic carbonate structures: Limestone-Precipitating Springs (LPS). The most characteristic organisms in these springs are those that contribute to carbonate precipitation, e.g.: the mosses Palustriella and Eucladium, the crenophilous desmid Oocardium stratum, and cyanobacteria (e.g., Rivularia). These organisms appear to be sensitive to phosphorus pollution. Invertebrate diversity is modest, and highest in pools with an aquatic-terrestrial interface. Internationally, comprehensive legislation for spring protection is still relatively scarce. Where available, it covers all spring types. The situation in Europe is peculiar: the only widespread spring type included in the EU Habitat Directive is LPS, mainly because of landscape aesthetics. To support LPS inventorying and management to meet conservation-legislation requirements we developed a general conceptual model to predict where LPS are more likely to occur. The model is based on the pre-requisites for LPS: an aquifer lithology that enables build-up of high bicarbonate and Ca(2+) to sustain CaCO3 oversaturation after spring emergence, combined with intense groundwater percolation especially along structural discontinuities (e.g., fault zones, joints, schistosity), and a proper hydrogeological structure of the discharging area. We validated this model by means of the LPS information system for the Emilia-Romagna Region (northern Italy). The main threats to LPS are water diversion, nutrient enrichment, and lack of awareness by non-specialized persons and administrators. We discuss an emblematic case study to provide management suggestions. The present review is devoted to LPS but the output of intense ecological research in Central Europe during the past decades has clearly shown that effective conservation legislation should be urgently extended to comprise all types of spring habitats.


Subject(s)
Calcium Carbonate/analysis , Conservation of Water Resources/methods , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Natural Springs/chemistry , Aquatic Organisms/classification , Biodiversity , Calcium Carbonate/chemistry , Chemical Precipitation , Models, Theoretical
5.
Geomorphology (Amst) ; 171-172(100): 83-93, 2012 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24966447

ABSTRACT

In the Obernberg valley, the Eastern Alps, landforms recently interpreted as moraines are re-interpreted as rock avalanche deposits. The catastrophic slope failure involved an initial rock volume of about 45 million m³, with a runout of 7.2 km over a total vertical distance of 1330 m (fahrböschung 10°). 36Cl surface-exposure dating of boulders of the avalanche mass indicates an event age of 8.6 ± 0.6 ka. A 14C age of 7785 ± 190 cal yr BP of a palaeosoil within an alluvial fan downlapping the rock avalanche is consistent with the event age. The distal 2 km of the rock-avalanche deposit is characterized by a highly regular array of transverse ridges that were previously interpreted as terminal moraines of Late-Glacial. 'Jigsaw-puzzle structure' of gravel to boulder-size clasts in the ridges and a matrix of cataclastic gouge indicate a rock avalanche origin. For a wide altitude range the avalanche deposit is preserved, and the event age of mass-wasting precludes both runout over glacial ice and subsequent glacial overprint. The regularly arrayed transverse ridges thus were formed during freezing of the rock avalanche deposits.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...