During the Early Jurassic (lasting ~ 27 Myr) only thin deposits (mostly ca. 30–50 m) of the Staffelegg Formation accumulated in wide parts of NW Switzerland while sea-level rise was in the range… Click to show full abstract
During the Early Jurassic (lasting ~ 27 Myr) only thin deposits (mostly ca. 30–50 m) of the Staffelegg Formation accumulated in wide parts of NW Switzerland while sea-level rise was in the range of ~ 60 m. Isopach and facies patterns provide clear evidence of differential subsidence while faults that formed in the basement during the late Palaeozoic became reactivated. Orientation of many relative thickness minima and maxima follows faults constituting either the Rhenish Lineament or the North Swiss Permo-Carboniferous Trough. Such pattern is seen on the isopach maps of the Schambelen, Beggingen, Weissenstein, Frick, Fasiswald, Mt. Terri, Breitenmatt, Rickenbach, Rietheim and Gross Wolf members of the Staffelegg Formation, independently upon if the individual lithostratigraphic units are condensed or display somewhat enhanced thickness. Onto a general trend of decreasing thickness to the S, often isopach anomalies of small areal extension are superimposed. They suggest that localized strike-slip movements affected a mosaic of basement blocks. Reactivation of faults in the basement during the Early Jurassic is also evidenced by temporally enhanced hydrothermal activity as documented by chronometric ages of veins and mineral alterations.
               
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