Grès des Voirons

Representation and status

Color CMYK
(0%,17%,43%,18%)
Color RGB
R: 210 G: 175 B: 120
Rank
lithostratigraphic Formation
Validity
Unit is in Use
Status
informal term
Status discussion

Nomenclature

Deutsch
Voirons-Sandstein
Français
Grès des Voirons
Italiano
Arenaria dei Voirons
English
Voirons Sandstone
Origin of the Name

Les Voirons (France)

Historical Variants

Flysch supérieur ou Grès des Voirons (Pilloud 1936), Série des Grès des Voirons (Lombard 1940), Grès des Voirons (Jan du Chêne et al. 1975), Flysch des Voirons proprement dit = Grès des Voirons (Karnay 1980), Flysch gréseux = Grès des Voirons (Charollais et al. 1998), Voirons Sandstones (Ospina-Ostios et al. 2013), Formation du Grès des Voirons (Ragusa 2015)

Description

Thickness
200-300 m (Charollais et al. 1998, Ospina-Ostios et al. 2013, Ragusa 2015).

Hierarchy and sequence

Superordinate unit

Age

Age at top
  • late Eocene
Age at base
  • middle Eocene
Dating Method

Nummulites du Paléocène tardif à l'Eocène précoce (Pilloud 1936), voire à l'Eocène moyen ou tardif (Lombard 1940). Palynologie et nannofossiles calcaires: Thanétien précoce à Lutétien (Jan du Chêne et al. 1975, Van Stuijvenberg & Jan du Chêne 1980). Foraminifères benthiques et planctoniques: Eocène moyen à tardif (P13-P19 ; Ujetz 1996, Frébourg 2006, Ospina-Ostios et al. 2013).

Geography

Geographical extent
Flanc oriental des Voirons et base du flanc occidental du Mont Vouan.
Type area
Les Voirons (France)
Type profile
  • La Moutonnière (France)
    Site particularities
    • Untergrenze
    • typische Fazies
    Site accessibility
    • Strassenanschnitt / Bahnanschnitt
    Coordinates
    • (2519200 / 1123240)
    Note
    • Ragusa 2015 fig. 6.11 (6,391322 E / 46,255011 N)
Reference profiles
  • torrent de Curseille (France)
    Site particularities
    • typische Fazies
    Site accessibility
    • Bachprofil
    Coordinates
    • (2518645 / 1116400)
    Note
    • Ragusa 2015 fig. 8.6-8.11

Palaenography and tectonic

  • Flyschs
Tectonic unit (resp. main category)
Kind of protolith
  • sedimentary

References

Definition
Ospina-Ostios Lina M., Ragusa Jérémy, Wernli Roland, Kindler Pascal (2013) : Planktonic foraminifer biostratigraphy as a tool in constraining the timing of flysch deposition: Gurnigel flysch, Voirons massif (Haute-Savoie, France). Sedimentology 60, 225–238

Forming the crest and most of the eastern flank of the Voirons ridge (Fig. 2), this formation is between 200 m and 300 m thick, and mainly consists of decimetre-thick to metre-thick beds of sandstone with subordinate calcareous shale, conglomerate and calcilutite. The sandstone beds are grey, with a brown alteration colour, and usually show sharp contacts with the surrounding shales. Grain size in the sandstone ranges from silt to very coarse sand. These rocks can be classified as calcite-cemented arkoses (Fig. 3) with a variable content of bioclasts and lithoclasts. Bioclasts primarily include red-algae fragments, clasts of larger benthic foraminifera (nummulitids and discocyclinids), planktonic foraminifera, bryozoans and rare echinoid debris. Winkler (1984a) found similar compositions in the Gurnigel–Schlieren Flysch group from Central Switzerland to the Lake of Geneva. Shaly intervals are grey to brown; green shale interbeds, very common in the Gurnigel flysch from other areas (Hubert, 1967; Winkler, 1984b), are missing in the Voirons. Metre-thick conglomerate layers mainly occur at localities near the top of the Voirons ridge (Pralere and Signal sections) and are typically clast-supported. The Voirons Sandstones contain igneous, metamorphic and sedimentary lithoclasts. The former include characteristic pink-coloured granite and red porphyry fragments, the parent rocks of which are presently only cropping out in the southern Alps and the Austro-Alpine zone (Sarasin, 1894; Cogulu, 1961). However, they also contain a small percentage of andesite and diabase (Fig. 4) that seem very similar to those found in greater quantities in very external (Helvetic and sub-Alpine) flysch formations (Taveyannaz Sandstones and Val d’Illiez Formation; Martini, 1968; Sawatzki, 1975). The sedimentary lithoclasts, of possible north-Alpine affinity, include micritic limestones with calpionellids, Urgonian-type biosparites, globotruncanid- rich mudstones and spiculites similar to those found in the Helvetic/Ultrahelvetic Wang beds (Villars, 1988). Note that Globotruncana bearing biomicrite was also observed in the Schlieren flysch (Winkler, 1983). Preliminary heavy-mineral analyses (Table 2; Ragusa, 2009; Ospina et al., 2009) show that some exposures (for example, the Moutonnieres section) are characterized by the occurrence of garnet, whereas others (for example, Fillinges quarry) contain a much lower quantity of this mineral. The common occurrence of sole marks (flute and groove casts) and Bouma sequences indicate that the Voirons Sandstones were deposited by gravity-driven mass flows. The thick, flat-based, massive sandstone beds (Fig. 5A) and clast-supported conglomerates exposed along the crest of the Voirons can be assigned to Facies F5 and F3 (Mutti, 1992; Mutti et al., 2003), respectively, whereas the rhythmic alternations of laminated sandstone and shale found in other exposures (for example, Bons quarry; Fig. 5B) appear to be typical of Facies F8 to F9. The planktonic foraminiferal assemblages retrieved from the samples gathered for this study are generally poorly preserved and contain a considerable amount of reworked specimens, including Upper Cretaceous globotruncanids, and Palaeocene and Lower Eocene globigerinids. Providing an accurate age for this formation is thus problematic, as is also the case for the other formations comprising the Gurnigel flysch in this area. The oldest assemblage obtained from one sample collected near the top of the Voirons massif (Signal exposure) includes Acarinina bullbrooki, Acarinina collactea, Acarinina primitiva, Acarinina echinata, Subbotina yeguaensis, Subbotina linaperta, Globigerina officinalis, Truncorotaloides topilensis ?, Turborotalia aff. ampliapertura (Fig. 6H and I), Turborotalia aff. cerroazulensis s.s. (small), Turborotalia frontosa, Turborotalia aff. increbescens, Dentoglobigerina ? (crushed), Morozovella spinulosa and small Catapsydrax sp. indicating a Middle Eocene age (planktonic foraminiferal zones P12 to P14). The youngest assemblage, retrieved from one thin shaly layer on the west flank of the Voirons (Moutonnieres exposure), contains well-preserved, partial internal moulds with fragile, finely preserved remnants of foraminifer walls of Subbotina cf. praeturritilina (Fig. 6A), Subbotina cf. linaperta (Fig. 6D), Catapsydrax aff. unicavus (juv.; Fig. 6E), Globoturborotalita ouachitaensis s.s. (Fig. 6J) and Globoturborotalita cf. ouachitaensis gnaucki (Fig. 6K). This assemblage is consistent with planktonic foraminiferal zones P14 to P19, or younger, indicating that the unit is Upper Eocene to Lower Oligocene. Overall, the planktonic foraminiferal data constrain the deposition of the Voirons Sandstones to between the Middle Eocene and the Early Oligocene. By contrast, nannofossil assemblages obtained from the same samples are Upper Palaeocene to Lower Eocene and, hence, are considered reworked (calcareous nannoplankton zones NP6 to 8, to NP10, corresponding to planktonic foraminiferal zones P4 to P6).

Material and varia

15203288
  • Grès des Allinges

    Name Origin
    Les Allinges, Thonon (Haute-Savoie)
    Rank
    lithostratigraphic unit
    Status
    informal term
    In short
    Alternances marno-gréseuses et accumulations gréso-conglomératiques qui constituent le Flysch des Voirons dans la région de Thonon.
    Age
    Thanetian
  • Conglomérat du Signal

    Name Origin
    Signal des Voirons
    Rank
    lithostratigraphic Member (Subformation)
    Status
    informal term
    In short
    Accumulations lenticulaires de grès grossier et de conglomérat au sein du Grès des Voirons.
    • Banc du Signal des Voirons

      Name Origin
      Signal des Voirons
      Rank
      lithostratigraphic Bed
      Status
      informal term
    • Banc des Monastères

      Rank
      lithostratigraphic Bed
      Status
      informal term
    • Banc de Brantaz

      Rank
      lithostratigraphic Bed
      Status
      informal term
    • Banc de Pralère

      Rank
      lithostratigraphic Bed
      Status
      informal term
  • Grès de Bons

    Name Origin
    Carrière de Bons
    Rank
    lithostratigraphic Member (Subformation)
    Status
    informal term
    In short
    Base gréso-marneuse du Grès des Voirons dans sa partie nord-occidentale.
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