Flysch di Bergamo

Representation and status

Color RGB
R: 215 G: 215 B: 105
Rank
lithostratigraphic Formation
Validity
Unit is in Use
Status
informal term

Nomenclature

Deutsch
Bergamo-Flysch
Français
Flysch de Bergamo
Italiano
Flysch di Bergamo
English
Bergamo Flysch
Origin of the Name

Bergamo (Italia)

Historical Variants

obere bunte Mergel und Mergelkalke (Vonderschmitt 1938), Flysch di Bergamo (Gelati & Passeri 1967), Bergamo Flysch (Bichsel & Häring 1981, Bernoulli et al. 1981)

Description

Thickness
400-1000 (Bichsel & Häring 1981)

Hierarchy and sequence

Superordinate unit
Subordinate units

Age

Age at top
  • Campaniano tardo
Age at base
  • Late Santonien

Geography

Geographical extent
Lombardia centrale (Brianza, Bergamasco).

Palaenography and tectonic

  • Südalpine Flysche
Paleogeography
Lombardy Basin
Tectonic unit (resp. main category)
Kind of protolith
  • sedimentary
Conditions of formation

outer-fan sediments (Bichsel & Haering 1981)

References

Definition
Gelati R., Passeri L. (1967) : Il Flysch di Bergamo, nuova formazione cretacica delle Prealpi Lombarde. Riv. It. Paleont. Strat. 73/3, 835–849
Definition
Bichsel Matthias, Häring Markus O. (1981) : Facies evolution of Late Cretaceous flysch in Lombardy (northern Italy). Eclogae geol. Helv. 74/2, 383–420

p.396: The term Bergamo Flysch was introduced by Gelati & Passeri (1967). The Bergamo Flysch is exposed mainly between the eastern Brianza and the river Oglio. with a thickness of about 1000 m in the Brianza and of at least 400 m in the Sarnico area. The lower boundary of the Bergamo Flysch is marked everywhere by the Sarnico Sandstone, or by the Piano di Sirone and is dated by Dicarinella assymetrica (Sigal), Globotruncana fornicata Plummer and Globotruncana lapparenti Bolli as Late Santonian. In the Bergamasco as well as in the central and eastern Brianza, the Bergamo Flysch is already succeeded in the Middle Campanian by marly Scaglia cinerea (Piano di Brenno) (Kleboth, in prep.).
In contrast to the siliciclastic sediments of the Sarnico Sandstone, the Bergamo Flysch contains abundant carbonate particles and displays a great variability in composition. The calcareous fraction consists mainly of carbonate fragments displaced from a (?)Late Cretaceous shallow-water area (echinoderms, red algae, bryozoa, miliolids, agglutinating foraminifera and pellet-like, strongly micritized red algal and shell fragments). The Bergamo Flysch is characterized by classical turbidites often with complete Bouma sequences, usually building up acyclic successions, but locally with huge negative cycles, up to 80 m thick.
The individual turbidite beds range from 20 to 200 cm in thickness representing mainly facies D1-2 and C1-2 and occasionally B2. Locally, also symmetrical cycles (thickening and coarsening/thinning and fining upward) up to 30 m thick occur. The sandstones show a grain size variation from fine sand up to well rounded broadly channelized conglomerates (max. diameter 5 cm). The sand/shale ratio varies from 1:2 at the base and the top to 5:1 in the middle part of a cycle. On the whole, these features are consistent with the definition of the outer-fan facies association.

  • Megabed di Missaglia

    Name Origin
    Missaglia (Italia)
    Rank
    lithostratigraphic Bed
    Status
    local name (informal)
    In short
    Megabed costituto da un conglomerato basale (1 m), che passa gradualmente verso l'alto a calcarenite gradata, calcisiltite e marna.
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