El Cenomaniense-Turoniense de Tamajón (Guadalajara, España)contexto geológico, contenido fósil e interpretación paleoambiental

  1. Fernando Barroso-Barcenilla
  2. Julia Audije-Gil
  3. Mélani Berrocal-Casero
  4. Pedro Miguel Callapez
  5. Beatriz Carenas
  6. María José Comas-Rengifo
  7. Fernando García Joral
  8. José Francisco García-Hidalgo
  9. Javier Gil-Gil
  10. Antonio Goy
  11. Senay Amalia Ozkaya de Juanas
  12. Sergio Rodríguez García
  13. Vanda Faria dos Santos
  14. Manuel Segura
  15. Paloma Sevilla
Journal:
Boletín de la Real Sociedad Española de Historia Natural. Sección geológica

ISSN: 0583-7510

Year of publication: 2017

Tome: 111

Issue: 1-4

Pages: 67-84

Type: Article

More publications in: Boletín de la Real Sociedad Española de Historia Natural. Sección geológica

Abstract

The Cenomanian-Turonian section (Upper Cretaceous) of Tamajón (Guadalajara, Spain) combines high scientific, educational and outreach values. Their materials unconformably lie onto Triassic deposits in Buntsandstein facies, being included into the Utrillas, Villa de Vés and Picofrentes formations, and the lower part of the Ciudad Encantada Formation. The section contains beds showing several tracks (occasionally trackways) of numerous crocodyliforms, a possible theropod dinosaur and some fishes, and different ichnofossils (mainly bioturbations Thalassinoides) usually caused by invertebrates. It also yields some fragments of trunks and branches of vascular plants, a high diversity of invertebrates, including scleractinian corals, bryozoans, brachiopods, bivalves (a high variety, including ostreids and rudists), gastropods, cephalopods (mainly ammonoids), echinoderms (echinoids), and decapod crustaceans, together with osteichtian and chondrichthyan fishes, and marine reptiles, among many other remains. The whole section records a marked marine transgression and the beginning of a regression, showing the change from a terrestrial and transitional setting, with vascular plants and crocodyliforms (Utrillas and Villa de Vés formations), to a fully marine environment, extraordinary rich in molluscs and other invertebrates (Picofrentes Formation), which finally was affected by a notable eustatic fall (lower part of Ciudad Encantada Formation).