Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2015

Presentation information

Oral

Symbol S (Solid Earth Sciences) » S-GL Geology

[S-GL38] Lower-Middle Pleistocene Boundary GSSP in the Kazusa Group

Mon. May 25, 2015 10:00 AM - 10:45 AM 102B (1F)

Convener:*Makoto Okada(Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Science, Ibaraki University), Yusuke Suganuma(National institute of Polar Research), Osamu Kazaoka(Research Institute of Environmental Geology, Chiba), Chair:Makoto Okada(Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Science, Ibaraki University)

10:15 AM - 10:30 AM

[SGL38-02] Litho-stratigraphy and sedimentary environment of upper part of Kokumoto Formation with the L-M Pleistocene boundary

*Osamu KAZAOKA1, Naohisa NISHIDA2, Makoto OKADA3, Yusuke SUGANUMA4, Shun KAMEYAMA5, Takeshi YOSHIDA1, Masaaki MORISAKI1, Atsushi KAGAWA1, Itaru OGITSU1, Kentaro IZUMI6, Hiroomi NAKAZATO7, Hisao KUMAI8, Hisashi NIREI9 (1.Research Institute of Environmental Geology, Chiba, 2.Geological Survey of Japan, AIST, 3.Ibaraki University, 4.National Institute of Polar Research, 5.Environmental Protection division of Chiba Prefectural Government, 6.University of Tokyo, 7.National Institute for Rural Engineering, 8.Osaka City University, 9.Japan Branch of Geoscience for Environmental Management, IUGS)

Keywords:GSSP, The Lower-Middle Pleistocene boundary, Kokumoto Formation, Kazusa Group, Tabuchi section

The Lower-Middle Pleistocene Kazusa Group, deposited on bathyal-shelf in the Pacific Ocean with micro fossil, distributes widely in Boso peninsula. The group exposes continuously along Yoro river, Chiba section. The Kazusa group consists of Kurotaki formation (mainly tuffaceous gravelly sandstone), Katsuura formation (mainly alternation of sandstone with slump bed), Namihana formation (mainly siltstone with slump bed), Ohara formation (muddy alternation of sandstone and siltstone), Kiwada formation (muddy alternation of sandstone and siltstone with slump bed), Otadai formation (alternation of sandy alternation and muddy alternation of sandstone and siltstone), Umegase formation (mainly sandy alternation of sandstone and siltstone), Kokumoto formation (alternation of thick siltstone and sandy alternation of sandstone and siltstone), Kakinokidai formation (sandysiltstone with sandstone), Chonan formation (alternation of thin sandstone and thin siltstone) in ascending order. Total thickness of the Kazusa Group is over 2,000 meters with over 50 marker tephra. Depositional rate of it is rapid, about 2 m/kyr. So Chiba section have high potential for international stratotype section.
Kokumoto formation, about 350 meter thick, is composed of lowermost part, lower part, upper part and uppermost part in ascending order. Lowermost part, about 60 meter thick, consists of thick siltstone with thin sandstone bed and marker tephras, Ku6 and ku5. Lower part, about 120 meter thick, consists of sandy alternation of sandstone and siltstone with Ku3 tephra. Upper part, about 80 meter thick, consists of thick siltstone without slump bed and with thin sandstone and marker tephra (Byakubi zone (Byk-E, Byk-D, Byk-C, Byk-B, Byk-A), Tap-B, Tap-A, Tas-C, Tas-B, Tas-A, Ku2). The Matuyama?Brunhes boundary is in Byk zone. Uppermost part, about 90 meter thick, consists of sandy alternation of sandstone and siltstone with Ku0.1 tephra.
The upper part, thick siltstone, is interbedded with thin, 1-3cm thick, sandstone every 0.3-3 m thick and thin, 1-5 cm thick, sandysiltstone every 0.1-0.25 m thick without slump bed and thick mudflow bed. The siltstone have bathyal and sublittoral benthic foraminifera and many trace fossils. Grain size distribution in the siltstone have bimodal grain group. Main grain group is composed of fine silt and sub group consists of very fine sand. These characteristics show hemipelagic sedimentary environment in deep sea and very fine sand flow often into, namely deep sea slope.