Kalkige Einheit (der Camosci-Decke)

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Representation and status

Color CMYK
(0%,0%,0%,100%)
Rank
lithostratigraphic Formation
Validity
Unit is in Use
Status
incorrect name (though informally used)

Nomenclature

Deutsch
Kalkige Einheit (der Camosci-Decke)
Français
Unité calcaire (de la nappe des Camosci)
Italiano
Unità calcarea (della Falda dei Camosci)
English
Calcareous unit (of the Camosci nappe)
Historical Variants
Marbles + Quartzites (Bianchi et al. 1998), Calcareous unit = Liassic (Carrupt 2003)

Description

Thickness
Environ 100 m (Carrupt 2003 Fig.2.4)

Hierarchy and sequence

Age

Age at top
  • Early Jurassic
Age at base
  • Early Jurassic
Dating Method
Analogies de faciès : présence de deux niveaux quartzitiques (Lotharingien et Domérien) (Carrupt 2003).

References

Definition
Carrupt Elisabeth (2003) : New stratigraphic, structural and geochemical data from the Val Formazza - Binntal area (Central Alps). Mémoires de Géologie (Lausanne) 41, 103 p.

p.17: Calcareous unit: the contact with the underlying Dolomitic unit is either gradual or clear-cut. Whenever in contact with the lustrous micaschist (rare), the contact is clear-cut. But when it is in contact with the metasandstone, a transitional passage from the metasandstone to a quartzitic calcitic marble is observed over 5 metres. Upsection the marble becomes gradually purer until it gives way to a pure calcareous recrystallised marble. The latter is laterally discontinous but may reach 20 metres in thickness at its most central part. The detritic fraction (quartz, dolomite, micas) then increases again. Most of the marbles contain up to 20% of quartz and about 10% of phyllosilicates. A quartzitic level follows which gradually interfingers with subordinated thin levels of calcitic marble. These marble interbeds progressively thicken and dominate upon the quartzitic layers. The subordinated layers, the quartzite as well as the calcitic marble, are often boudinaged probably due to alpine deformations. A quartzitic calcitic marble surmounts this series: the latter may contain discontinuous thin levels of quartzitic and dolomitic metasandstone. A 1 m-thick discontinuous quartzitic level ends this Calcareous unit.
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