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      Stratigraphic Architecture of the Karoo River Channels at the End-Capitanian

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      Frontiers in Earth Science
      Frontiers Media SA

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          Abstract

          The main Karoo Basin of southern Africa contains the continental record of the end-Triassic, end-Permian, and end-Capitanian mass extinction events. Of these, the environmental drivers of the end-Capitanian are least known. Integrating quantitative stratigraphic architecture analysis from abundant outcrop profiles, paleocurrent measurements, and petrography, this study investigates the stratigraphic interval that records the end-Capitanian extinction event in the southwestern and southern main Karoo Basin and demonstrates that this biotic change coincided with a subtle variation in the stratigraphic architectural style ∼260 Ma ago. Our multi-proxy sedimentological work not only defines the depositional setting of the succession as a megafan system that drained the foothills of the Cape Fold Belt, but also attempts to differentiate the tectonic and climatic controls on the fluvial architecture of this paleontologically important Permian succession. Our results reveal limited changes in sediment sources, paleocurrents, sandstone body geometries, and possibly a constant hot, semi-arid paleoclimate during the deposition of the studied interval; however, the stratigraphic trends show upward increase in 1) laterally accreted, sandy architectural elements and 2) architectural elements that build a portion of the floodplain deposits. We consider this to reflect a long-term retrogradational stacking pattern of facies composition that can be linked to changes on the medial parts of southward draining megafans, where channel sinuosity increased, and depositional energy decreased at the end-Capitanian. The shift in the fluvial architecture was likely triggered by basin-wide allogenic controls rather than local autogenic processes because this trend is observed in the coeval stratigraphic intervals from geographically disparate areas in the southwestern and southern main Karoo Basin. Consequently, we propose that this regional backstepping most likely resulted from tectonic events in the adjacent Cape Fold Belt.

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          Architectural-element analysis: A new method of facies analysis applied to fluvial deposits

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            The Karoo basins of south-central Africa

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              A temporal link between the Emeishan large igneous province (SW China) and the end-Guadalupian mass extinction

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Frontiers in Earth Science
                Front. Earth Sci.
                Frontiers Media SA
                2296-6463
                February 12 2021
                February 12 2021
                : 8
                Article
                10.3389/feart.2020.521766
                0fc49d47-dea2-4d79-8d33-4cd9685b10a8
                © 2021

                Free to read

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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