Pliocene-Lower Pleistocene shallow-water mixed siliciclastics and carbonates (Yanigua and Los Haitises formations) in eastern Hispaniola (Dominican Republic)

International audience The virtually unfolded sedimentary cover of the Cordilleras Central and Oriental in the eastern Dominican Republic (eastern Hispaniola, tropical North Atlantic) largely consists of Pliocene to Early Pleistocene mixed siliciclastics and carbonates. These deposits have been grou...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Sedimentary Geology
Main Authors: Braga, Juan C., de Neira, Alberto Diaz, Lasseur, Eric, Mediato, Jose, Aguirre, Julio, Abad, Manuel, Hernaiz-Huerta, Pedro P., Monthel, Jacques, Perez-Valera, Fernando, Lopera, Eusebio
Other Authors: Universidad de Granada = University of Granada (UGR), Instituto Geológico y Minero de España (IGME), Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières (BRGM) (BRGM), INYPSA, Universidad de Huelva, Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Jaén (UJA)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal-brgm.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00846742
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sedgeo.2012.04.007
Description
Summary:International audience The virtually unfolded sedimentary cover of the Cordilleras Central and Oriental in the eastern Dominican Republic (eastern Hispaniola, tropical North Atlantic) largely consists of Pliocene to Early Pleistocene mixed siliciclastics and carbonates. These deposits have been grouped into two laterally interfingering mapping units, the Yanigua and Los Haitises formations. The former (mainly siliciclastics) comprises marl, marly limestone, and minor conglomerate, sandstone, lignite, and carbonaceous clay and crops out closest to the basement. The Los Haitises Formation mainly consists of limestone and intercalating beds of marly limestone and marl. Lithological mapping at the 1:50,000 scale and facies analysis of twelve measured sections and of additional fourteen outcrops suggest that these deposits mainly formed on a shallow-water marine platform fringing the precursor reliefs of the Cordillera Oriental and the southeastern end of the Cordillera Central. Only a limited proportion of sediment formed in floodplains and marshes. Marl and marly limestone dominated the inner platform sediments. Terrigenous mud decreased away from the emergent basement and carbonate sedimentation dominated the more external platform. Corals, molluscs, echinoids, foraminifers, bryozoans, coralline algae, and Halimeda are the main components with varying amounts of carbonate mud. The platform was generally a low-energy environment with seagrass patches. In the inner platform, corals grew as isolated colonies or as small patch reefs dominated by Porites in marly and bioclastic substrates. Branching corals (Stylophora and Acropora) grew in extensive carpets in more distal areas. At least in the last stage of its development (Early Pleistocene), the platform was rimmed by a reef barrier similar to the Holocene Caribbean barrier reefs, with Acropora gr. palmata, A. cervicornis, Porites, Montastrea, Siderastrea, and Diploria as the main reef builders.