Abstract
The Rifian Corridor was one of the Mediterranean–Atlantic seaways that progressively restricted and caused the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC). Many key questions concerning the controls on the onset, progression and termination of the MSC remain unanswered mainly because the evolution of these seaways is poorly constrained. Uncertainties about the age of restriction and closure of the Rifian Corridor hamper full understanding of the hydrological exchange through the MSC gateways: required connections to sustain transport of salt into the Mediterranean for the primary-lower gypsum and halite stages. Here we present integrated surface-subsurface palaeogeographic reconstructions of the Rifian Corridor with improved age-control. Information about age and timing of the closure have been derived from high-resolution biostratigraphy, palaeoenvironmental indicators, sediment transport directions, and the analysis of published onshore subsurface (core and seismic) datasets. We applied modern taxonomic concepts to revise the biostratigraphy of the Rifian Corridor and propose astronomically-tuned, minimum-maximum ages for its successions. Finally, we summarise the palaeogeographic evolution in four time slices corresponding to the middle Tortonian (10.57–8.37), late Tortonian (8.37–7.25 Ma), early Messinian (7.25–6.35 Ma), and late Messinian (6.35–5.33 Ma). Several successions record the closure of the corridor via a continuous marine to continental-lacustrine transition. The youngest dated marine sediments represent a good approximation of the age of seaway closure. The closure of the South Rifian Corridor is constrained to 7.1–6.9 Ma; that of the North Rifian Corridor is more uncertain and ranges from 7.35 to ca. 7 Ma. We conclude that the Rifian Corridor was already closed in the early Messinian and did not contribute to the restriction events that resulted in the MSC. Because the Betic Corridor is also closed by the early Messinian, the modern Gibraltar Straits remain the sole option in the Western Mediterranean as last Messinian seaway that was open during the MSC. Our results imply that the Gibraltar Straits could have been established as the exclusive Mediterranean-Atlantic portal already in the late Miocene, and therefore we suggest that future field and drilling campaigns should target the Alboran Sea and the Gibraltar region to investigate water exchange before and during the Messinian Salinity Crisis and its impact on Atlantic circulation and global climate.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 37-59 |
| Number of pages | 23 |
| Journal | Earth-Science Reviews |
| Volume | 180 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 May 2018 |
Funding
We thank Roland Wernli (Univ. Genève) for kindly answering our questions and for sending his manuscript, ONHYM for providing prompt assistance, field support and unpublished datasets, the Ministry of Geology in Rabat for allowing us to analyse the sample collections, Abdel Mojid Kouissi (Bab Tiouka commune, Sidi Kacem) for his extraordinary help during several fieldwork campaigns. The research leading to these results has received funding from the People Programme (Marie Curie Actions) of the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007–2013/under REA Grant Agreement No. 290201 (MEDGATE). We are very grateful to all the MEDGATE for the contribution to the fieldwork and all the insightful discussions that enriched this four-year work. Journal reviews by Ed. Paul Wilson and Francisco Javier Hernández-Molina were very much appreciated, and their comments helped us to improve the clarity of the manuscript.
Keywords
- Late Miocene
- Marine gateways
- Mediterranean-Atlantic exchange
- Messinian Salinity Crisis
- Palaeogeography
- Rif