Skip to main content

IMIS

A new integrated search interface will become available in the next phase of marineinfo.org.
For the time being, please use IMIS to search available data

 

[ report an error in this record ]basket (1): add | show Print this page

one publication added to basket [231585]
The Dormaal Sands and the Palaeocene Eocene boundary in Belgium
Steurbaut, E.; De Coninck, J.; Roche, E.; Smith, T. (1999). The Dormaal Sands and the Palaeocene Eocene boundary in Belgium. Bull. Soc. Géol. Fr. 170(2): 217-227
In: Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France. Société Géologique de France: Paris. ISSN 0037-9409; e-ISSN 1777-5817, more
Peer reviewed article  

Keywords
    Geological time > Phanerozoic > Geological time > Cenozoic > Paleogene > Palaeogene > Eocene
    Geological time > Phanerozoic > Geological time > Cenozoic > Paleogene > Paleocene
    Actinopterygii [WoRMS]; Chondrichthyes [WoRMS]
    Belgium, Zoutleeuw [Marine Regions]
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    holostratigraphy; palaeontology; Dormaal Sands; Palaeocene Eocene boundary; Belgium

Authors  Top 
  • Steurbaut, E., more
  • De Coninck, J., more
  • Roche, E.
  • Smith, T., more

Abstract
    The stratotype of the Dormaal Sand Member, representing the lower part of the Tienen Formation (formerly Upper Landenian, Upper Landen Formation or Sparnacian auct.), exhibits a cyclic sedimentation pattern of fluviatile origin. This palaeoriver system was inhabited by a large variety of freshwater biota and bordered by dense warm-temperate to subtropical forests, occasionally set afire by lightning. Abundant contemporaneous land plants and terrestrial vertebrate remains accumulated in this depocentre, together with large quantities of reworked Campanian chalk pebbles and late Palaeocene fish teeth, resulting from local and upstream erosion. The Dormaal Sands represent the infill of a large palaeovalley? cut during a eustatically induced sea-level lowstand, which was presumably related to plate-tectonic convergence. For the moment it is justified to assume that the burial of the Dormaal mammal fauna post-dated this major sea-level fall, but preceded the events which led to the well-known kaolinite influx and the subsequent, globally detectable negative carbon isotope excursion, which are useful criteria for the definition of the Palaeocene/Eocene boundary. However, as long as no consensus has been reached on this boundary definition, the exact chronostratigraphic position of the Dormaal Sand Member and its mammal fauna remains unresolved.

All data in the Integrated Marine Information System (IMIS) is subject to the VLIZ privacy policy Top | Authors