Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1657989518> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W1657989518 endingPage "1227" @default.
- W1657989518 startingPage "1207" @default.
- W1657989518 abstract "During the Late Jurassic, accelerated ocean-floor spreading and associated sea-level rise were responsible for a worldwide transgression, which reached its maximum in the Late Kimmeridgian. In many Western European basins, this major sea-level rise led to the formation of marly and condensed sections. In the Swiss Jura, however, a shallow carbonate platform kept growing and only subtle changes in the stratigraphic record suggest an increasingly open-marine influence. Field observations and thin-section analyses reveal that the central Swiss Jura was at that time occupied by tidal flats and by more or less open marine lagoons where shoals and bioherms developed. The evolution through time of sedimentary facies and bed thicknesses permits the definition of small-, medium-, and large-scale depositional sequences. The diagnostic features of these sequences are independent of scale and seem largely controlled by the Kimmeridgian second-order transgression. A high-resolution sequence-stratigraphic correlation with biostratigraphically well-dated hemipelagic and pelagic sections in the Vocontian Basin in France reveals that: (i) The most important increase in accommodation recorded in the Kimmeridgian of the central Swiss Jura occurs in the Eudoxus ammonite zone (Late Kimmeridgian) and corresponds to the second-order maximum flooding recognized in many sedimentary basins. (ii) The small- and medium-scale sequences have time durations corresponding to the first and second orbital eccentricity cycle (i.e. 100 and 400 ka, respectively), suggesting that sedimentation on the platform and in the basin was at least partly controlled by cyclic environmental changes induced by insolation variations in the Milankovitch frequency band. The comparison of the high-resolution temporal framework defined in the Swiss Jura and Vocontian Basin with the sequence-stratigraphic interpretation realized in other Western European basins shows that the large-scale sequence boundaries defined in the Kimmeridgian of the Swiss Jura appear in comparable biostratigraphic positions in most Western European basins. Discrepancies that occur are probably because of local or regional tectonics." @default.
- W1657989518 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1657989518 creator A5022483768 @default.
- W1657989518 creator A5088399825 @default.
- W1657989518 date "2005-11-17" @default.
- W1657989518 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W1657989518 title "Facies, cycles, and controls on the evolution of a keep-up carbonate platform (Kimmeridgian, Swiss Jura)" @default.
- W1657989518 cites W1534624437 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W1581942403 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W1734992813 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W1965375940 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W1995253200 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W1997252211 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W1997556201 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W1997662297 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W1998158732 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2005078130 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2006732057 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2008462601 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2010390915 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2017195568 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2022895897 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2028351901 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2033223278 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2040038618 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2043680455 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2043680656 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2048888468 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2065000212 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2065761817 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2068250761 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2081758660 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2104585857 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2123643957 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2124477155 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2125420379 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2142916851 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2231254829 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2263460781 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2315420937 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2327706037 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W2347084597 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W3022941355 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W33474148 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W4231765107 @default.
- W1657989518 cites W94434984 @default.
- W1657989518 doi "https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3091.2005.00736.x" @default.
- W1657989518 hasPublicationYear "2005" @default.
- W1657989518 type Work @default.
- W1657989518 sameAs 1657989518 @default.
- W1657989518 citedByCount "72" @default.
- W1657989518 countsByYear W16579895182012 @default.
- W1657989518 countsByYear W16579895182013 @default.
- W1657989518 countsByYear W16579895182014 @default.
- W1657989518 countsByYear W16579895182015 @default.
- W1657989518 countsByYear W16579895182016 @default.
- W1657989518 countsByYear W16579895182017 @default.
- W1657989518 countsByYear W16579895182018 @default.
- W1657989518 countsByYear W16579895182019 @default.
- W1657989518 countsByYear W16579895182020 @default.
- W1657989518 countsByYear W16579895182021 @default.
- W1657989518 countsByYear W16579895182022 @default.
- W1657989518 countsByYear W16579895182023 @default.
- W1657989518 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W1657989518 hasAuthorship W1657989518A5022483768 @default.
- W1657989518 hasAuthorship W1657989518A5088399825 @default.
- W1657989518 hasBestOaLocation W16579895184 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C109007969 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C111368507 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C12294951 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C126753816 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C127313418 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C146588470 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C151730666 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C15739521 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C178100555 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C191897082 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C192562407 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C2778609275 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C2779032034 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C2780659211 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C30860409 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C6494504 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C74501621 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConcept C77271252 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConceptScore W1657989518C109007969 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConceptScore W1657989518C111368507 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConceptScore W1657989518C12294951 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConceptScore W1657989518C126753816 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConceptScore W1657989518C127313418 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConceptScore W1657989518C146588470 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConceptScore W1657989518C151730666 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConceptScore W1657989518C15739521 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConceptScore W1657989518C178100555 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConceptScore W1657989518C191897082 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConceptScore W1657989518C192562407 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConceptScore W1657989518C2778609275 @default.
- W1657989518 hasConceptScore W1657989518C2779032034 @default.