Sedimentary Geology, 99(1995), 37-59
THE MANCIANO SANDSTONE: A SHOREFACE DEPOSIT OF MIOCENE BASINS OF THE NORTHERN
APENNINES, ITALY
I.P. MARTINI1, A. CASCELLA2 and A. RAU2
1Department of Land Resource Science, University of Guelph, Guelph,
Ont. N1G 2Wl Canada
2CNR Centro Studio Geologia Strutturale e Dinamica Appennino, Via S. Maria
53, I-56126, Pisa, Italy
¡¡
Well exposed, diamond-line cut, quarry-exposures of the Manciano Sandstone
allow a detailed analysis of sandy, fossiliferous, nearshore deposits of the
shelf of the Northern Apennines. The Manciano Sandstone is characterized by
medium to very coarse, washed, fairly well sorted, lithic sandstone, with thin
interlayers of sandy conglomerates. It displays two principal, rhythmically
alternating sandy facies: (a) slightly burrowed (mostly Macaronichnus, Ophiomorpha,
Skolithos) units, trough cross-bedded, locally showing possible tidal
bundles with few whole Scutella (echinoid) shells reworked on foresets,
or occasional large-scale (approximately 2 m) planar cross-bedded, bar-accretion
units; and (b) slightly finer, darker-coloured reddish-brown sandstone units,
heavily bioturbated (Cruziana-Skolithos ichnofauna) representing slightly
more sheltered settings. Large oysters are present in near-living position in a
few thin layers and, more commonly, as reworked, comminuted fragments in sandy
layers. Many calcareous pebbles and oyster fragments are bored. Other fossils
consist of echinoids (Scutella), some balanids and reworked foraminifera
and bryozoa. The Manciano sands were deposited primarily in a wave-dominated
shoreface, containing migrating bars/ridges and affected by wave-induced,
possibly tidal-enhanced currents. This tidal influence confirms the opening of
the Miocene Apenninic Sea to oceans, both the developing Atlantic Ocean to the
west and, through a long, narrow seaway, the Asian portion of the Tethys Sea to
the east.