Upper Oligocene lithostratigraphic units and the transition to the Miocene in North Belgium
In: Geologica Belgica. Geologica Belgica: Brussels . ISSN 1374-8505; e-ISSN 2034-1954, more
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Author keywords |
Chattian, Campine Basin, Roer Valley Graben, Lower Rhine Graben, Voort Formation, Veldhoven Formation, Boncelles Sand |
Abstract |
The presence of Chattian deposits in Belgium was confirmed in the early 20th century by correlation of their mollusc faunas with the type Chattian in Germany. Consequently, the Voort Formation in the Campine Basin and the Boncelles Sand on the northeastern Ardennes were established and assigned a Chattian age. Contacts with underlying Rupelian and overlying Burdigalian formations are marked by hiatuses, linked mainly to end-Oligocene Savian tectonics and reactivation of the Roer Valley Graben (RVG). On the Campine Block, only the lower part of the Chattian, the Voort Sand is deposited, increasing in thickness in the direction of the RVG and including a geophysically traceable clayey marker horizon allowing the mapping of this unit in the Campine Basin, into the Netherlands and even possibly link it to the hydrostratigraphic subdivision of the Chattian in the Lower Rhine Graben. Lithologically, these uppermost Paleogene Chattian deposits form the base of the Neogene sequence along the Southern Bight of the North Sea, characterised by predominantly glauconite-bearing sand. The Chattian sediments rapidly become thicker in the strongly subsiding RVG, resulting in a more continuous sedimentation with the development above the Voort Sand of a clay unit and another sand unit, forming together the Veldhoven Formation. In Belgium such sequence is only found in the RVG without biostratigraphic data. However, it can be demonstrated that lithostratigraphically this sequence is comparable to the better-studied Veldhoven Formation in the Netherlands where biostratigraphy revealed that the Veldhoven Formation grades into the Aquitanian to Burdigalian, crossing the Paleogene–Neogene boundary and separated from middle Miocene deposits by the Early Miocene Unconformity (EMU). It is proposed to harmonise Belgian and Dutch stratigraphic nomenclatures, making the more complete Veldhoven Formation applicable both in the Campine Basin and the Roer Valley Graben, and further north in the Netherlands. Within this scheme, the Belgian Voort Formation becomes the Voort Member as the lower part of the Veldhoven Formation, of which the middle Wintelre clayey and upper Someren sandy members are only recognised in the graben. |
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