The Middle-Upper Eocene in the Northern Plateau of the Bahariya Depression, Western Desert (Egypt) and correlation with other Tethyan sectors

Ehab M. Assal,Hamdalla A. Wanas, Heba A. Abou Awad

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY(2024)

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Abstract
This study describes the paleoenvironmental evolution of the Middle-Upper Eocene succession exposed along the northern plateau of the Bahariya Depression (Western Desert, Egypt). Based on detailed field observations and facies analysis, twenty-one facies were recognized and grouped into five facies associations: tidal flat to restricted marine (FA1), lagoonal (FA2), ramp crest (FA3), middle ramp (FA4), and siliciclastic-dominated foreshore-shoreface (FA5). These facies associations were developed in a gently dipping mixed siliciclastic-carbonate ramp which was connected with siliciclastic coastal-shelf depositional system. The biogenic assemblages described in the Middle-Upper Eocene deposits show a mixing of photozoan and heterozoan associations, indicating euphotic to mesophotic inner to mid-ramp settings under mesotrophic-oligotrophic conditions. The succession shows a transition from photozoan to heterozoan carbonates and a shift towards inner ramp settings. The formation and the evolution of the northern Bahariya platform reflect the complex interplay of synsedimentary tilting due to post-Middle Eocene inversion phase, high-frequency sea-level changes, transition from warm to humid climate and paleoecological parameters. The sedimentation pattern including distinct lateral changes in facies and thicknesses are largely controlled by tectonics. Long-term sea level changes were responsible for the unconformities associated with major regressions. The Middle-Upper Eocene strata display a characteristic upsection increase in clastic input from the hinterlands through tectonic uplift and/or a change to a cooling climate. The shift to a colder climate, which was a result of a global temperature decrease, led to the maximum northward retreat of the Neo-Tethys Ocean. During the Eocene epoch, carbonates dominated by Larger Benthic Foraminifera (LBF) were prevalent along the entire Tethyan margins. This was linked to a decline in coral reef formations. Comparisons with other southern and western-central Tethyan sectors showed that small coral reef build-ups in widely scattered localities could exist in broad LBF-rich ramps. Consequently, zooxanthellate corals were only able to flourish locally in marginal environments under specific ecological conditions.
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Key words
Facies analysis,Depositional model,Mixed siliciclastic-carbonate ramp,Eocene,Bahariya depression,Egypt
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