Quick
Search: 
 
advanced search
 GSW Home    GeoRef Home    My GSW Alerts    Contact GSW    About GSW    Journals List    Help 
Bulletin de la Societe Geologique de France Email Content Delivery
JOURNAL HOME HELP CONTACT PUBLISHER SUBSCRIBE ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS

Bulletin de la Societe Geologique de France; May 2006; v. 177; no. 3; p. 155-175; DOI: 10.2113/gssgfbull.177.3.155
© 2006 Societe Geologique de France
This Article
Right arrow Résumé
Right arrow Figures Only
Right arrow Full Text
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow Submit a response
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me when eLetters are posted
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Right arrow Citation Map
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in Web of Science
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via Web of Science (3)
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Thiry, M.
Right arrow Articles by Baele, J.-M.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
GeoRef
Right arrow GeoRef Citation

Continental France and Belgium during the early Cretaceous: paleoweatherings and paleolandforms

Médard Thiry1, Florence Quesnel2, Johan Yans3, Robert Wyns2, Anne Vergari4, Hervé Theveniaut2, Régine Simon-Coinçon1, Caroline Ricordel1, Marie-Gabrielle Moreau5, Denis Giot2, Christian Dupuis3, Laurent Bruxelles6, Jocelyn Barbarand7 and Jean-Marc Baele3

1 Ecole des Mines de Paris, 35 rue St Honoré, F-77305 Fontainebleau, France, et CNRS-UMR 7619 Sisyphe "Structure et fonctionnement des systèmes hydriques continentaux". medard.thiry{at}ensmp.fr
2 BRGM, CDG, BP 6009, F-45060 Orléans cedex 2, France
3 Faculté Polytechnique, Service de Géologie fondamentale et appliquée, rue de Houdain 9, B-7000 Mons, Belgique
4 Laboratoire Central de Gralex, 35 rue du faubourg, B-1430 Quenast (Rebecq), Belgique
5 IPGP Laboratoire de Paléomagnétisme et de Géomagnétisme, 4 Place Jussieu, F-75252 Paris cedex 05, France
6 Institut National de Recherches Archéologiques Préventives, ZA les Champs Pinsons, 13 rue du Négoce, 31650 St-Orens-de-Gammeville
7 Département des Sciences de la Terre, Université Paris Sud, F-91405 Orsay cedex, France

During the early Cretaceous, successive tectonic phases and several sea level falls resulted in the emersion of the main part of western Europe and the development of thick "lateritic" weathering. This long period of continental evolution ended with the Upper Cretaceous transgressions. During this period, the exposed lands displayed a mosaic of diverse morphologies and weathered landscapes.

Bauxites are the most spectacular paleoweathering features, known for long in southern France. Recently, new residual outcrops have been identified, trapped in the karstic depressions of the Grands Causses. Other bauxitic formations, containing gibbsite, have also been recognised, occurring with the Clay-with-Jurassic-cherts in the southeastern border of the Paris Basin. These bauxitic formations overlay Jurassic limestone and are buried beneath Upper Cretaceous marine deposits. The recognition of bauxites up north into the southern Paris Basin significantly widens the extension of the Lower Cretaceous bauxitic paleolandscapes.

On the Hercynian basements thick kaolinitic weathering mantles occur. They have been classically ascribed to the Tertiary. The first datings of these in situ paleosoils, by means of paleomagnetism and/or radiogenic isotopes, record especially early Cretaceous ages. This is the case for the "Siderolithic" formations on the edges of the French Massif Central, but also for the kaolinitic profiles in the Belgian Ardennes. In the Flanders, the Brabant basement is deeply kaolinised beneath the Upper Cretaceous cover. These paleosoils show polygenetic evolutions. The relief of these basement paleolandscapes may have been significant. There where probably high scarps (often of tectonic origin) reaching 200 m in elevation or beyond, as well as wide surfaces with inselbergs, as in the present day landscapes of tropical Africa and South America.

On the Jurassic limestone platforms occur diverse kaolinitic and ferruginous weathering products. Around the Paris Basin they show various facies, ranging from kaolinitic saprolites to ferricretes. Due to the lack of sedimentary cover, the age of these ferruginous and kaolinitic weathering products has been debated for long, most often allocated to the Siderolithic sensu lato (Eocene-Oligocene). Recent datings by paleomagnetism have enabled to date them (Borne de Fer in eastern Paris Basin) back also to the early Cretaceous (130 ± 10 Ma). These wide limestone plateaus show karstified paleolandforms, such as vast closed and flat depressions broken by conical buttes, but also deep sinkholes in the higher areas of the plateaus and piedmonts. The depth of the karst hollows may be indicative of the range of relative paleoelevations. Dissolution holes display seldom contemporaneous karst fillings, thus implying that the karstland had not a thick weathering cover or that this cover had been stripped off before or by the late Cretaceous transgression. Nevertheless, some areas, especially above chert-bearing Jurassic limestone or marl, show weathering products trapped in the karst features or as a thick weathering mantle.

In the Paris Basin, the Wealden gutter looked like a wide floodplain in which fluvio-deltaic sands and clays were deposited and on which paleosoils developed during times of non-deposition. The edges of the gutter were shaped as piedmonts linked up with the upstream basement areas. The rivers flowing down to the plain deposited lobes of coarse fluvial sands and conglomerates. The intensity of the weathering, the thickness of the profiles and their maturation are directly dependent on the duration of the emersion and the topographic location relative to the gutter. Near the axis of the gutter, where emersion was of limited duration, the paleoweathering features are restricted to rubefaction and argillization of the Lower Cretaceous marine formations. On the other hand, on the borders of the basin and on the Hercynian basement, where emersion was of longer duration, the weathering profiles are thicker and more intensively developed.

The inventory of the Lower Cretaceous paleoweathering features shows the complexity of the continental history of this period. Moreover, the preserved weathering products are only a part of this long lasting period, all the aspects relative to erosion phases are still more difficult to prove and to quantify. In this domain, apatite fission tracks thermochronology (AFTT) can be helpful to estimate the order of magnitude of denudation. Residual testimonies and subsequent transgressions may enable to estimate relative elevations, but in return, we presently have no reliable tool to estimate absolute paleoelevations. In the work presented here, the inventory enabled to draw a continental paleogeographic map showing the nature of the weathering mantles and the paleolandscape features, just as paleoenvironments and paleobathymetry presently appear on marine paleogeographic maps. For the future, the challenge is to make progress in dating the paleoweathering profiles and especially in the resolution of these datings, in order to correlate precisely the continental records with the different events which trigger them (eustatism, climate, regional and global geodynamics). The final goal will be to build up a stratigraphic scale of the "continental geodynamic and climatic events" in parallel with "sequential stratigraphy" in the marine realm.

Key Words: Paleoweathering • Paleokarst • Paleolandform • Paleogeography • Lower Cretaceous • France • Belgium




This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
Geological Society, London, Special PublicationsHome page
C. Xu, J. L. Mansy, P. Van Den Haute, F. Guillot, Z. Zhou, J. Chen, and J. De Grave
Late- and post-Variscan evolution of the Ardennes in France and Belgium: constraints from apatite fission-track data
Geological Society, London, Special Publications, January 1, 2009; 324(1): 167 - 179.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




JOURNAL HOME HELP CONTACT PUBLISHER SUBSCRIBE ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
Copyright © 2009 by Societe Geologique de France