6533b825fe1ef96bd1282681
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Evolution tectonique méso-cénozoïque du bassin de Paris: contraintes stratigraphiques 3D
Thierry NalpasCécile RobinChristophe PrijacGilles DromartFranck HanotMonique MettrauxF. GaumetFrançois GuillocheauJean-michel GaulierPaul Le StratBernard GrosdoyRoselyne FriedenbergJean-pierre GarciaOlivier SerranoGilles GrandjeanSylvie BourquinNicolas BraultPascal AllemandChristophe Rigolletsubject
PaleontologyGeophysicsRiftAptianPassive marginEurasian PlateSubsidenceLate MioceneCenozoicCretaceousGeologyEarth-Surface Processesdescription
Abstract 3D stratigraphic geometries of the intracratonic Meso-Cenozoic Paris Basin were obtained by sequence stratigraphic correlations of around 1 100 wells (well-logs). The basin records the major tectonic events of the western part of the Eurasian Plate, i.e. opening and closure of the Tethys and opening of the Atlantic. From earlier Triassic to Late Jurassic, the Paris Basin was a broad subsiding area in an extensional framework, with a larger size than the present-day basin. During the Aalenian time, the subsidence pattern changes drastically (early stage of the central Atlantic opening). Further steps of the opening of the Ligurian Tethys (base Hettangian, late Pliensbachian;...) and its evolution into an oceanic domain (passive margin, Callovian) are equally recorded in the tectono-sedimentary history. The Lower Cretaceous was characterized by NE–SW compressive medium wavelength unconformities (late Cimmerian–Jurassic/Cretaceous boundary and intra-Berriasian and late Aptian unconformities) coeval with opening of the Bay of Biscay. These unconformities are contemporaneous with a major decrease of the subsidence rate. After an extensional period of subsidence (Albian to Turonian), NE–SW compression started in late Turonian time with major folding during the Late Cretaceous. The Tertiary was a period of very low subsidence in a compressional framework. The second folding stage occurred from the Lutetian to the Lower Oligocene (N–S compression) partly coeval with the E–W extension of the Oligocene rifts. Further compression occurred in the early Burdigalian and the Late Miocene in response to NE–SW shortening. Overall uplift occurred, with erosion, around the Lower/Middle Pleistocene boundary.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2000-08-01 | Geodinamica Acta |