Rya Formation

The Rya Formation (Swedish: Ryaformationen) is a geologic formation in Skåne County, southern Sweden. It is Early to early Middle Jurassic (early Sinemurian to late Aalenian) in age. The Rya Formation comprises siltstones, claystones, sandstones, mudstones and rare coal beds. The formation overlies the Höganäs Formation and is overlain by the Vilhelmsfält and Mariedal Formations.

Rya Formation
Stratigraphic range: Early Sinemurian-late Aalenian
~198–171 Ma
TypeFormation
Sub-unitsDöshult, Pankarp, Katslösa & Rydebäck Members
UnderliesVilhelmsfält & Mariedal Formations
OverliesHöganäs Formation
ThicknessUp to 295 m (968 ft)
Lithology
PrimarySiltstone, claystone, sandstone, mudstone
OtherCoal
Location
Coordinates56.0°N 12.8°E / 56.0; 12.8
Approximate paleocoordinates45.4°N 16.7°E / 45.4; 16.7
RegionSkåne County
Øresund
Holstein
Country Sweden
 Denmark (offshore, subsurface)
 Germany (ex situ)
ExtentHöganäs & Øresund Basins
Type section
Named forRya, Katslösa
Rya Formation (Sweden)

The formation was deposited in the Höganäs and Øresund Basins that formed in the earliest Jurassic as part of the break-up of Pangea. The 295 metres (968 ft) thick formation comprises four members, from base to top the Döshult, Pankarp, Katslösa and Rydebäck Members. The depositional environment of the formation ranges from continental to open marine.

The Rya Formation has provided fossils of a number of sharks, ammonites, bivalves and ichnofossils. Coalified wood occurs as scattered pieces up to 6 centimetres (2.4 in) long and indeterminate belemnites, echinoids, serpulids, ostracods and nodosariid foraminifera were also recorded in the formation. Iron ooids containing erratic boulders, called Geschiebe in German, attributed to the Rya Formation were found in Holstein, northern Germany.

Description

The Rya Formation crops out in Colonus Shale Trough of western Scania.[1] The formation overlies the Höganäs Formation and is overlain by the Vilhelmsfält Formation in the Helsingborg area and by the Mariedal Formation in the area of Landskrona and Kävlinge.[2] The Rya Formation is subdivided, from base to top, into the Döshult, Pankarp, Katslösa and Rydebäck Members. The formation is found in the Ängelholm, Helsingborg, Landskrona and Kävlinge areas. In southwest Skåne, the Rya Formation is missing or only poorly developed.[3] In the Øresund Basin between Sweden and Denmark, the formation is truncated by the Basal Middle Jurassic unconformity.[4]

Erratic boulders, called Geschiebe in German, attributed to the Rya Formation and containing iron ooids were found in Holstein, northern Germany.[5]

Subdivision

Döshult Member

The early Sinemurian Döshult Member (Swedish Döshultsledet) comprises coarse-grained cross-layered sandstones and siltstones in the lower part, and is dominated by dark clays and marls rich in marine fossils in the upper part.[6] The member is up to 80 metres (260 ft) thick in the Ängelholm, Helsingborg and Landskrona areas. Presently, the basal part of this member is exposed at three localities in the Helsingborg area. These contain mineralogically and texturally mature, trough cross-bedded sandstones, commonly with herringbone structures showing north and south oriented paleocurrent directions. The occurrence of herringbone structures in well-sorted sand suggests high energy foreshore to subtidal marine depositional conditions for the lower part of the member. In an abandoned quarry in northwest Skåne (Gantofta brickpit in the Helsingborg area, outcrop very limited at present) the upper part of the Döshult Member commences with bioturbated marine nearshore sands, including burrows, as well as abundant marine invertebrate body fossils. This is followed by a bioturbated shelf mudstone with storm-deposited sand and silt intercalations (tempestites). A massive red mudstone with scarce marine body fossils and burrows follows, which is interpreted as having been deposited rapidly, in a low energy but oxidizing environment. The youngest part of the succession comprises siltstones and mudstones, with carbonate-rich beds, deposited in a shallow marine setting.[3] Coaly detritus, muscovite, very small shells and shell fragments, and framboidal pyrite nodules (0.1–0.3 mm in diameter) are characteristic constituents of this member.[7]

Pankarp Member

The dark mudstones of the Döshult Member are overlain by the Pankarp Member (Swedish Pankarpsledet) with a sharp conglomeratic boundary.[8] The late Sinemurian Pankarp Member has an estimated thickness of up to 70 metres (230 ft) in the subsurface of the Ängelholm, Helsingborg and Landskrona areas. In the Kävlinge area, the thickness is about 20 metres (66 ft) thick. In westernmost Skåne, the member has been observed in small diameter drill cores. There, the member is subdivided into a lower unit of variegated clays and shales, a middle, poorly sorted silty to sandy unit including a coal bed, and an upper monotonous mudstone unit which is silty and rich in organic matter at the base, and reddish–greenish at the top. It presents different coloration probably due to different degrees of oxidation of iron in the claystone.[6] In the uppermost part of one core, the Pankarp Member comprises lenticular bedded heteroliths with Planolites burrows.[3]

Katslösa Member
Map of the Katslösa and Rydeback members

The late Sinemurian to early Pliensbachian Katslösa Member (Swedish Katslösaledet) is mainly known from the subsurface in westernmost Skåne, and it has a thickness of 30 to 40 metres (98 to 131 ft) in the Ängelholm, Helsingborg and Landskrona areas. In the Kävlinge area, the thickness is about 75 metres (246 ft). Sedimentological interpretations are mainly based on the results of petrographical studies of museum collections. The Katslösa Member yields a rich marine microfauna and macrofauna, and it is dominated by homogeneous mudstone deposited in a marine low-energy environment. Is composed mostly by marine green, brown and dark gray claystones and sandstones.[6] Thin beds of matrix-rich quartz wackes are common. They are typically mineralogically mature but texturally highly immature with abundant angular sand grains. The matrix comprises organic matter, micrite, mica and clay minerals. In thin section, the sandstones show evidence of intense burrowing, which has obliterated depositional structures. Scattered berthierine ooids, as well as authigenic siderite crystals have been observed in the member.[9]

Rydebäck Member

The late Pliensbachian to late Aalenian Rydebäck Member (Swedish Rydebäcksledet) is up to 70 metres (230 ft) thick in the Ängelholm, Helsingborg and Landskrona areas. It is only known from subsurface material in westernmost Skåne, and sedimentological analysis is based on observations from two wells (Rydebäck–Fortuna-1 and -4). These layers were deposited in small bands during a sea regression, and consist of marine gray, black, green and reddish brown sand and siltstones.[6] The member comprises a uniform succession of muddy arenites with a rich marine microfauna (mostly foraminifera), and represents deposition in an offshore low-energy environment. The sediments are strongly burrowed, which has caused an effective mixing of sand and mud, resulting in the forming of quartz wackes. The sand is quartz-rich, and grains are typically well rounded. Berthierine ooids are common constituents of the sediment.[9]

Depositional environments

Early Jurassic paleogeography

Tethys Sea transgression entailed formation of fossil-bearing marine deposits in Skane, also associated with an increased tectonic activity.[10] Deposition of the Rya Formation began with nearshore coarse clastics, and continued with offshore mudstones with tempestites (the Döshult Member), followed by offshore muddy sediments with a brief non-marine interval (the Pankarp Member), and ended with deposition of open marine low-energy deposits (Katslösa and Rydebäck Members). The marine Rya Formation shows an overall fining-upwards trend, and an up-section bathymetric deepening of the depositional environment. The depositional environment in western Skåne was either physically protected from the storm energy due to basin topography, or deposition in Skåne took place below storm wavebase. Berthierine ooids occur scattered in the Katslösa Member and are increasingly abundant up-section in the Rydebäck Member. There is a possibility that iron ooid formation was promoted by precipitation of iron and silica from volcanic fluids rising up through the substrate, as has been reported from modern marine sediments offshore Indonesia. This hypothesis has emerged with the publication of age data for the volcanic rocks in Skåne, which now appear to be comparable in age to the prominent iron ooid-bearing deposits, i.e. the Rydebäck Member and the Röddinge Formation.[9]

Age

Based on foraminifers, ammonites and ostracods, the Döshult Member is dated to the early Sinemurian, the Pankarp Member to the late Sinemurian, the Katslösa Member to the late Sinemurian to early Pliensbachian and the Rydebäck Member to the late Pliensbachian to late Aalenian.[3]

The formation is time-equivalent with the Röddinge Formation of the Vomb Trough,[2] the Djupadal Formation in cental Skane and the Sorthat Formation of Denmark, with which it shares the SpheripollenitesLeptolepidites and CallialasporitesPerinopollenites Zones.[11][12] The formation also correlates with the Fjerritslev Formation of the Danish Basin,[13] and the Gassum Formation of the Øresund Basin.[14] The storm-dominated, hummocky cross-stratified Hasle Formation on Bornholm is contemporaneous with the muddy Katslösa Member of the Rya Formation.[9]

Basin history

The Sorgenfrei-Tornquist Zone (STZ) running through southern Sweden and eastern Denmark is indicated in lightblue
Basement

The basins where the Rya Formation was deposited form part of the Sorgenfrei-Tornquist Zone (STZ) of the Trans-European Suture Zone, the boundary between Baltica to the northeast and Peri-Gondwana to the southwest. The orogeny was active in the Late Ordovician, or approximately 445 million years ago.

At the Carboniferous-Permian boundary around 300 Ma, the area was influenced by the Skagerrak-Centered Large Igneous Province, another large igneous province stretching across the North Sea, the eponymous Skagerrak between Denmark and Sweden and to the northwest up to northern England and Scotland.

Extent of the CAMP
Break-up of Pangea

The basins of southern Sweden and eastern Denmark were formed during the latest Triassic and earliest Jurassic. During this time the Central Atlantic magmatic province (CAMP), with an estimated 11,000,000 square kilometres (4,200,000 sq mi) the largest igneous province in Earth's history, was formed to the present southwest of the Danish-Swedish realm. In the Skåne area, the Central Skåne Volcanic Province was active during the time of deposition of the Rya Formation, commencing around the Sinemurian-Pliensbachian boundary. The earliest magmatism was partly emplaced into and across pre-existing extensional basin structures.[15] The first and the main volcanic phase of this volcanic province occurred in the Early Jurassic (late Sinemurian to Toarcian) at 191–178 Ma.[16] Analysis of the volcanic rocks produced by this Jurassic volcanism suggests a continental Strombolian-type eruptive character close to the oceans of the Early Jurassic.[17] No correlative pyroclastic beds have yet been identified in sedimentary basins surrounding central Skåne.[18]

Toarcian

During deposition of the Rydebäck Member, the Toarcian turnover happened. This event at the Pliensbachian-Toarcian boundary characterized by widespread anoxic conditions globally, led to the extinction of various groups of flora and fauna. Taxa inhabiting the upper water column were unaffected by anoxia and included ammonites and belemnites. Epifaunal taxa adapted to low-oxygen conditions, such as the buchiids, posidoniids and inoceramids, flourished in the post-extinction environment during the survival interval.[19]

Paleogeography of northwestern Europe during the Early Jurassic with Agaleus shark fossil finds. Elevated land areas are shown in grey.

Economic geology

A study on the geothermal potential of reservoirs in the Øresund Basin published in 2018 by Erlström et al. gave results of the formation together with the Gassum and Höganäs Formations, giving the following characteristics of the three Early Jurassic formations:[20]

  • Net sand thickness - 60 to 100 metres (200 to 330 ft)
  • Porosity - 18 to 34%
  • Permeability - 50 to 1500 mD
  • Cl concentration - 120 to 190 gram/liter
  • Productivity index - 7.0 m3/hr/bar

A study published in the same year analyzing the CO2 storage potential of the Rya and Höganäs Formations concluded a storage capacity of 543 megatons of carbon dioxide.[21]

The organic content of the Jurassic strata in Skåne is typically dominated by gas-prone kerogen (type III), which is below, or at the onset of, thermal maturity.[18]

Fossil content

The formation has provided fossils of typically marine fauna. With the exception of a continental coal bed, the formation is marine in character. Shark teeth were reported from the Rydebäck Member.[22] Apart from a few teeth of the hybodont Hybodus reticulatus, the shark fauna from the Rya Formation is exclusively neoselachian.[23]

Fish
Color key
Taxon Reclassified taxon Taxon falsely reported as present Dubious taxon or junior synonym Ichnotaxon Ootaxon Morphotaxon
Notes
Uncertain or tentative taxa are in small text; crossed out taxa are discredited.
Genus/Family Species Location Material Notes/Affinities Images

Acrodus[24]

  • Acrodus sp.

Katslosa, Bed 42

  • Small Fragment of Tooth Crown

A marine Shark, member of the Acrodontidae.

Hybodus[25]

  • Hybodus reticulatus
  • Hybodus sp.

Road between the hamlets of Rya and Katslosa

  • Fin Spine
  • Multiple Teeth

A marine Shark, member of the Hybodontiformes. Related to Hybodus hauffianus and other genera from the south of Germany. Only non-Neoselachian recovered from the location.

Hexanchidae[25]

  • Hexanchidae indet.
  • Single incomplete tooth

Marine Cow Sharks, Incertade Sedis Inside Hexanchidae. Isolated teeth appear to be similar to Hexanchus arzoeensis.

Agaleus[25]

  • Agaleus dorsetensis
  • Four incomplete teeth

A Marine Shark of the Family Agaleidae.

Paraorthacodus[26]

  • Paraorthacodus sp.
  • Three broken teeth

Marine Sharks of the Family Paleospinacidae. One of the earliest records of the genus Paraorthacodus, together with others from France.

Synechodus[27]

  • Synechodus occultidens
  • Synechodus enniskilleni
  • Synechodus? sp.
  • Teeth
  • One complete scale

Marine Sharks of the Family Paleospinacidae. The complete scale described above most closely resembles scales from Synechodus pinnai.

"Synechodus"[25]

  • "Synechodus" sp.
  • One complete tooth

Marine Sharks of the Family Paleospinacidae. The tooth described may represent a new species.

Sphenodus[28]

  • Sphenodus sp.
  • Two complete teeth

Marine Sharks of the Family Orthacodontidae.

Chimaeriformes[25]

  • Chimaeriformes Indeterminate
  • Fragmentary Remains

Incertade Sedis Fragmentary remains of Chimaeras

Actinopterygii[25]

  • Actinopterygii Indeterminate
  • Scales
  • Ganoid Scales

Incertade Sedis Bony Fish Scales

"Otolithus"[24]

  • "Otolithus" bornholmiensis

Katslosa, Bed 30

  • 20 Otoliths

Bony Fish Otoliths Similar to ones recovered from the Hasle Formation.

Annelida
Echinodermata
  • Isocrinus ranae sp. nov.[30]
  • Balanocrinus subteroides[31]
  • Hispidocrinus scalaris[31]
  • ?Acrosaleniidae Indeterminate[30]
Ammonites
Brachiopods
Bivalves
  • Neocrassina fortuna[34]
  • Tutekeria cf. rickardsoni[35]
  • Tancredia erdmanni[35]
  • Tancredia johnstrupi[35]
  • Tancredia lineata[35]
Gasteropods
Scaphopods
Ichnofossils

Coalified wood occurs as scattered pieces up to 6 centimetres (2.4 in) long and indeterminate belemnites, echinoids, serpulids, ostracods and nodosariid foraminifera were also recorded in the formation.[7]

See also

References

  1. Ahlberg et al., 2003, p.528
  2. Ahlberg et al., 2003, p.530
  3. Ahlberg et al., 2003, p.533
  4. Erlström et al., 2018, p.129
  5. Hinz-Schallreuter & Schallreuter, 2009, p.2
  6. Andersson & Hybertsen, 2010-8-17
  7. Frandsen & Surlyk, 2003, p.547
  8. Frandsen & Surlyk, 2003, p.550
  9. Ahlberg et al., 2003, p.534
  10. Greiff, 2019-8
  11. Nielsen et al., 2003, p.588
  12. Nielsen et al., 2003, p.590
  13. Frandsen & Surlyk, 2003, p.543
  14. Erlström et al., 2018, p.138
  15. Bryan & Ferrari, 2013, p.1058
  16. Bergelin, 2009
  17. Augustsson, 2009
  18. Ahlberg et al., 2003, p.539
  19. Harries & Little, 1999
  20. Erlström et al., 2018, p.139
  21. Sjöberg, 2018, p.90
  22. Rya Formation at Fossilworks.org
  23. Rees, 2000, p.411
  24. Troedsson (1951)-246
  25. Rees, 2000, p.412
  26. Rees, 2000, p.416
  27. Rees, 2000, p.417-18
  28. Rees, 2000, p.415
  29. Troedsson (1951)-p146-147
  30. Hunter, A.W. & Rees, J.(2010)-p10-24
  31. Troedsson (1951)-p15
  32. Frandsen & Surlyk, 2003, p.545
  33. Troedsson (1951)-p148-150
  34. Troedsson (1951)-p161-170
  35. Troedsson (1951)-p172-180
  36. Troedsson (1951)-p151-160
  37. Troedsson (1951)-p238-240
  38. Troedsson (1951)-p230-245
  39. Frandsen & Surlyk, 2003, p.546

Bibliography

Media related to Rya Formation at Wikimedia Commons

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