Benthic foraminiferal assemblages from Plio-Pleistocene open bay to lagoonal sediments of the Western Peloponnesus (Greece)
Publication date
1979
Authors
Hageman, J.
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Document Type
Dissertation
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Abstract
A quantitative investigation has been carried out on benthic foraminiferal
faunas from Plio-Pleistocene, open bay to lagoonal deposits of the Vounargon
Formation of the western Peloponnesus, and a reconstruction has been
made of the paleogeographic history of this area.
After a period of denudation and deposition of lacustrine sediments in
large areas of the Peloponnesus, a Late Pliocene transgression introduced
an extensive shallow marine environment in the Pyrgos area, with numerous,
probably East-West directed sand ridges. This depositional realm, which may
have extended over large areas of the northern Peloponnesus, was probably
connected with the open sea towards the North. To the South-East and
South it was apparently bordered by a land mass, while a hypothetical
ridge or shoal area, extending from the Gulf of Kyparissia towards Zakynthos
may have formed the western boundary. The Gavrovo-Tripolitza flysch
possibly was the main source for the material of the sand ridges. During the
Pleistocene the area of maximum subsidence shifted to the northern part of
the Pyrgos area, while large parts of the central Peloponnesus werd uplifted.
In this episode the orientation of the sand ridges changed from East-West to
North-South.
Fifteen sections in the Vounargon Formation, which together are thought
to present a characteristic picture of the open bay to lagoonal deposits, were
studied in detail. A correlation could be established between the character
of the benthic associations and environmental factors such as type of sediment,
salinity, sub aquatic vegetation and depth.
The relatively open marine basal parts of the Vounargon Formation
appeared to contain a fauna of mud-dwellers with as its most important
constituents Brizalina, Bulimina and Cassidulina. The faunas from environments
associated with the sand ridges are generally characterized by high
frequencies of species of Nonion, Elphidium and Ammonia. Sediments from
environments with a strongly decreased salinity appeared to contain poor
faunas made up almost entirely of Ammonia beccarii tepida.