Black shale, grey shale, fossils and glaciers: Anatomy of the Upper Ordovician-Silurian succession in the Tazzeka Massif of eastern Morocco

Daniel Paul Le Heron, Yahya Khoukhi, Florentin Paris, Jean François Ghienne, Alain Le Herissé

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

A 400 m thick clastic succession of Late Ordovician through Silurian age crops out in the Tazzeka Massif, eastern Morocco. Biostratigraphic data (chitinozoa, acritarchs) constrain these rocks to the Late Katian through Hirnantian (coeval with glaciation in Gondwana), with a ~ 8 Myr hiatus at the Ordovician-Silurian boundary. Sedimentological analysis reveals six facies associations, including interbedded black and grey shale couplets (poorly oxygenated shelf sediments), a bioturbated shale with wave rippled sandstone (inner shelf deposits), several occurrences of diamictite (of probable glaciogenic origin), interbedded sandstone and mudstone (storm and fair-weather wave agitated shoreface), rippled sandstone (storm return flow deposits) and amalgamated sandstone deposits (delta-front debris flows). Direct evidence for glaciation in the Hirnantian deposits is poor. Third order sequence stratigraphic analysis reveals two transgressive systems tracts (Late Katian and intra-Hirnantian), two highstand systems tracts (both intra-Hirnantian), lowstand wedges probably corresponding to two principal glacial lowstands, two maximum flooding surfaces (Late Katian and intra-Hirnantian), and a major ravinement surface (Hirnantian-Silurian contact). Remote from the centre of glaciation, the Tazzeka succession is suggested to be an excellent reference section with which to understand glacially-moderated sea-level changes in the Late Ordovician. Silurian (Late Llandovery or younger) shale geochemistry indicates organic enrichment (TOC > 4.5%). This organic enrichment greatly increases the known extent of the upper of two Silurian organic shales across North Africa (potential hydrocarbon source rocks) across the region.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)483-496
Number of pages14
JournalGondwana Research
Volume14
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2008
Externally publishedYes

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 105121 Sedimentology

Keywords

  • Hirnantian
  • Katian
  • Morocco
  • Ordovician
  • Sequence stratigraphy
  • Silurian

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Black shale, grey shale, fossils and glaciers: Anatomy of the Upper Ordovician-Silurian succession in the Tazzeka Massif of eastern Morocco'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this