Flysch di Pontida

Représentation et statut

Couleur RGB
R: 190 G: 190 B: 110
Rang
Formation lithostratigraphique
Usage
Ce terme n'est pas en usage.
Status
terme informel

Nomenclature

Deutsch
Pontida-Flysch
Français
Flysch de Pontida
Italiano
Flysch di Pontida
English
Pontida Flysch
Origine du nom

Pontida (Italia)

Variantes historiques

Flysch grigio (Vento 1951), Formazione di Pontida (De Rosa & Rizzini 1967, Bichsel & Häring 1981, Bersezio et al. 1990), Pontida Formation (Bernoulli et al. 1981)

Description

Épaisseur
Ca. 300 m.; max. 450 m (Bichsel & Häring 1981)

Hiérarchie et succession

Unité hiérarchiquement supérieure

Âge

Âge au sommet
  • Coniacien tardif
Âge à la base
  • Turonien précoce

Géographie

Extension géographique
Lombardia centrale (Brianza).

Paléogéographie et tectonique

  • Südalpine Flysche
Termes génériques
Type de protolithe
  • sédimentaire
Conditions de formation

Deposizione abissala / depositi di piana di bacino (Bichsel & Haering 1981)

Références

Révision
Bichsel Matthias, Häring Markus O. (1981) : Facies evolution of Late Cretaceous flysch in Lombardy (northern Italy). Eclogae geol. Helv. 74/2, 383–420

p.391: The term Pontida Formation was first used by de Rosa & Rizzini (1967) for the succession of turbiditic sandstones and marls in the Pontida area (section 31, p. 406; Fig. 1, G). The expression "Flysch grigio", introduced by Venzo (1951) is a synonym.
The individual turbidites, mainly Tb-e and Tc-e Bouma sequences, ranging from 5 to 100 cm in thickness, have a wide lateral continuity and are bound by even and parallel surfaces. The sandstone/shale ratio is 1:3 (facies D). The turbidites are acyclically arranged; the Pontida Formation displays the diagnostic features of a basin-plain facies association (Fig. 3). The sandstones are grey, brown weathering, of
fine to medium grain. Three main lithologie types can be distinguished: Lithic arenites are composed of siliciclastic fragments such as quartz, crystalline rocks, chert, feldspar and mica. Bioclastic arenites are mainly composed of detrital carbonate particles, such as fragments of echinoderms, molluscs (Inoceramus and rudists), microfossils and lithoclasts derived from the Mesozoic formations of the southern Alps. Foraminiferal arenites: composed mainly of planktonic foraminifera (50-80%) together with silt-sized quartz grains and mica.

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