Geophysical Research Letters (May 2024)

Decoding Deep‐Time Rhythms: Probing the Limit of Stratigraphic Correlation in the Time‐Specific Facies of the Late Devonian Usseln Limestone (Rhenish Massif, Germany)

  • N. M. A. Wichern,
  • O. M. Bialik,
  • T. Nohl,
  • R. T. Becker,
  • D. De Vleeschouwer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GL109392
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 51, no. 10
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract The iso‐ or diachronous character of a geologic unit is scale‐dependent, especially for time‐specific facies. The Usseln Limestone is a Late Devonian time‐specific facies from Germany, occurring immediately below the Lower Kellwasser black shale. Here, we investigate whether cm‐scale rhythmical bands within the Usseln Limestone are correlatable across its depositional basin. Its facies were studied at three locations ca. 50 km apart, representing different depositional settings. Its cm‐scale alternations in lithological facies and elemental content (μXRF) form an excellent target for correlations on millennial timescales. Correlation attempts failed to converge to a solution at the cm‐scale of individual rhythmites. Dynamic Time Warping, however, provided convincing correlations at the dm‐scale, supporting its use as a high‐resolution correlation tool. The Usseln Limestone base may be diachronous, but the top is likely isochronous. This finding is in agreement with sudden basin‐wide black shale deposition at the onset of the Kellwasser Crisis.

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