0000000000768983
AUTHOR
Bernard Mathey
Biogeography and diversity of South Atlantic Cretaceous echinoids: implications for circulation patterns
Abstract This survey of echinoid species living on the African and South American margins of the South Atlantic Ocean in Cretaceous times is based on a review of published species and abundant unpublished material. The synthetic approach is used to ascertain how the South Atlantic was colonised by echinoids from the time it first opened in the Early Cretaceous until communications were established with the North Atlantic and Mediterranean–Tethys in the Late Cretaceous. The survey focuses on the biogeographical origin of immigrant species and their relations with Indo-Madagascan, North Atlantic and Mediterranean–Tethyan faunas. Qualitative variations in species diversity are also studied whe…
Les ammonites du Niger (Afrique occidentale) et la transgression transsaharienne au cours du Cénomanien-Turonien
Resume Notre travail s’inscrit dans le cadre d’une revision de la paleontologie des ammonites liees a la transgression transsaharienne du Cenomanien-Turonien et d’un affinement de la biostratigraphie dans le bassin sedimentaire des Iullemeden (Niger occidental et meridional: Mt Iguelela et Damergou). Plus de 700 ammonites ont ete recoltees avec precision dans 8 localites, Il a ete ainsi possible de mettre en evidence une serie de 9 horizons biostratigraphiques et de decrire egalement 3 taxons nouveaux. En particulier, la presence de Metoicoceras geslinianum (d’ Orbigny ), associe aux Nigericeras gadeni ( Chudeau ) permet de mieux correler les niveaux a N. gadeni avec le nord-ouest de l’Euro…
The Leiza palaeo-fault: Role and importance in the Upper Cretaceous sedimentation and palaeogeography of the Basque Pyrenees (Spain)
Abstract New analysis of the Upper Cretaceous deposits of the Central Depression, a syncline within the Basque Pyrenees, shows that this structure was a deep marine basin analogous to the regional flysch troughs. It was bounded by active faults, including the Leiza palaeo-fault, which sustained erosion of the partly subaerially exposed margins. The Leiza palaeo-fault and its western counterpart, the Kalamua palaeo-fault, are thought to constitute the former plate boundary between Iberia and Europe, and a westward continuation of the North Pyrenean Palaeo-Fault.