Mt. Harris, THE FORESLOPE AND TOE-OF-SLOPE FACIES OF THE MIDDLE TRIASSIC LATEMAR BUILDUP (DOLOMITES, NORTHERN ITALY), Journal of sedimentary research. Section B, Stratigraphy and global studies, 64(2), 1994, pp. 132-145
The Latemar buildup was a circular carbonate buildup (4 km wide) with
a central platform core (flat-bedded interior platform and massive ree
f margin) flanked on all sides by slope facies. Steeply dipping (30-35
-degrees) foreslope breccias are present adjacent to the margin and fl
at-lying graded grainstones at the toe of slope. Slope facies relate d
irectly to depositional profile and slope angle. The steeply dipping f
oreslopes consist of lobate breccia beds that are 25 m thick and a few
tens of meters across, and extend tens to hundreds of meters downslop
e. Some beds are conformably overlain by thinner (< 1 m thick) beds of
finer-grained carbonate sediment. The basal surfaces of the breccias
are erosional and are anastamosing in both strike and dip views. The b
reccia talus was derived principally from margin boundstones and depos
ited by rockfalls and avalanches. Planar clinoforms extend the entire
height of the foreslope (hundreds of meters) and bracket depositional
units (clinothems) tens of meters thick. Clinoforms appear to be shear
surfaces formed during large slope failures (avalanches?). Graded gra
instone beds less than 1 m thick are present at the nearly flat-lying
toe of slope. These consist of redeposited shallow-water (platform-int
erior and reef-margin) carbonate sands, some with nodular limestone ca
ps, that are interpreted as proximal carbonate turbidites. Toe-of-slop
e breccias are the downdip extensions of foreslope breccias and pinch
out abruptly basinward. Some slope depositional processes are related
to high-frequency (fourth-order and fifth-order) sea-level changes: to
e-of-slope graded grainstones correspond to times of platform submerge
nce. In contrast, foreslope breccia was deposited during both platform
submergence and exposure. The slope deposits do not record the high-f
requency cyclic rhythms identified in shallow-water platform sections.
This is attributed to the nature of slope deposition. Downslope talus
transport was episodic and localized; graded grainstone beds reflect
storm redeposition.