This is an open access article under the terms of the Creat ive Commo ns Attri bution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
This article is made publicly available in the institutional repository of Wageningen University and Research, under the terms of article 25fa of the Dutch Copyright Act, also known as the Amendment Taverne. This has been done with explicit consent by the author.Article 25fa states that the author of a short scientific work funded either wholly or partially by Dutch public funds is entitled to make that work publicly available for no consideration following a reasonable period of time after the work was first published, provided that clear reference is made to the source of the first publication of the work.This publication is distributed under The Association of Universities in the Netherlands (VSNU) 'Article 25fa implementation' project. In this project research outputs of researchers employed by Dutch Universities that comply with the legal requirements of Article 25fa of the Dutch Copyright Act are distributed online and free of cost or other barriers in institutional repositories. Research outputs are distributed six months after their first online publication in the original published version and with proper attribution to the source of the original publication.
The Lower Cretaceous Tuxen (lower Hauterivian – upper Barremian) and Sola (upper Barremian – Albian) Formations in the Danish Central Graben (North Sea) constitute one of the oldest chalk successions recorded globally, but have received little attention with regards to sedimentary facies and depositional processes. This study presents the first comprehensive carbonate facies analysis of the succession, retrieved from seven drill cores from the Valdemar and Adda Fields. A total of 50 facies are identified, based on a continuum of six lithologies ranging from chalk to marlstone and tuffaceous siltstone to sandstone that display eight different sedimentary structures or fabrics, and two redox-associated lithological color variations (green and red) in the Adda Field. The eight sedimentary structures record: (i) comprehensive bioturbation of homogeneous sediment during fully oxygenated benthic conditions and low sedimentation rates; (ii) a similar bioturbation process but in heterogeneous sediment with lithological contrasts permitting visible burrows to form, perhaps due to rhythmic alternation between pelagic (clay-poor) and hemipelagic (clay-rich) sedimentation; (iii) pelagic to hemipelagic suspension settling in dysoxic to anoxic bottom-water conditions; (iv) patchy cementation of the shallow sea bed during incipient hardground formation; (v) reworking of bioclasts and chalk intraclasts by bottom or wave-induced currents and cohesive debris flows; (vi) pressure solution during late burial diagenesis; (vii) shear deformation by intense plastic deformation of unlithified sediment from limited lateral displacement; and (viii) silicification during burial diagenesis. The facies distribution indicates that active tectonism took place prior to the onset of anoxia that resulted in deposition of the Munk Marl Bed, which in the Valdemar Field was followed by tectonic waning and repeated anoxia. The Valdemar Field constituted a basinal depocenter and was flanked to the east by an early inversion high in the Adda Field characterized by condensation and bypass. The Fischschiefer Member represents a return to prevailing anoxia, consistent with global records of the early Aptian Oceanic Anoxic Event 1a (OAE-1a).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.