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Dive into the research topics where Christophe Durlet is active.

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Featured researches published by Christophe Durlet.


Journal of the Geological Society | 2009

Early Jurassic normal faulting in a carbonate extensional basin: characterization of tectonically driven platform drowning (High Atlas rift, Morocco)

Nadifa Lachkar; Michel Guiraud; Abdelghani El Harfi; Jean-Louis Dommergues; Guillaume Dera; Christophe Durlet

Abstract: This paper describes a tectonostratigraphic model of the synrift evolution of the Early Jurassic High Atlas rift of Morocco. The model is constrained by mapping of a set of inverted extensional blocks, by facies analysis of carbonate platform and turbiditic to hemipelagic synrift deposits, and by high-resolution (n × 100 ka) biostratigraphy of the Early Jurassic succession. The chronostratigraphic packages of the High Atlas of Rich vary significantly in thickness, facies and architecture from one tectonic block to another. Our study shows how synrift strain varied in space and time over a long time interval (14 Ma) around the High Atlas rift. Initially, in Sinemurian time, the High Atlas rift was affected by low-strain normal faulting that controlled the growth of an extensive, low-gradient carbonate platform, except in the northern domain (towards the rift axis), where hemipelagic deposition related to high-rate faulting prevailed. Subsequently, in Carixian–Domerian time, a rapid increase in accommodation space and block subsidence caused by high-strain normal faulting brought about localized drowning of the carbonate platform and the development of calciturbidites and of starved deposits towards the rift axis. During this interval, high-strain, upper-crustal normal faulting migrated rapidly (over a period of 5 Ma) towards the rift periphery.


Comptes Rendus De L Academie Des Sciences Serie Ii Fascicule A-sciences De La Terre Et Des Planetes | 2000

Corrélation stratigraphique entre les unités oligo-miocènes de Tunisie centrale et le Numidien

Chokri Yaich; Herman-Jean-François Hooyberghs; Christophe Durlet; Maurice Renard

Abstract Sedimentologic and biostratigraphic studies from the Oligocene to Middle Miocene deposits, exposed in central and north Tunisia, lead to a sequence stratigraphy subdivision of these deposits into several third order depositional sequences. The north–south correlations show that the detrital quartz pebbles appeared much later in central Tunisia (within a ‘fluvial-deltaic’ complex), than in the Numidian in northern Tunisia (characterised by deep submarine channels filled with high density turbidites). Thus, in central Tunisia, the Fortuna Formation (from Rupelian to Lower Burdigalian) could not have supplied Numidian sands from the Saharan region as has been proposed by several authors.


PLOS ONE | 2014

The skeleton of the staghorn coral Acropora millepora: molecular and structural characterization

Paula Ramos-Silva; Jaap A. Kaandorp; Frédéric Herbst; Laurent Plasseraud; Gérard Alcaraz; Christine Stern; Marion Corneillat; Nathalie Guichard; Christophe Durlet; Gilles Luquet; Frédéric Marin

The scleractinian coral Acropora millepora is one of the most studied species from the Great Barrier Reef. This species has been used to understand evolutionary, immune and developmental processes in cnidarians. It has also been subject of several ecological studies in order to elucidate reef responses to environmental changes such as temperature rise and ocean acidification (OA). In these contexts, several nucleic acid resources were made available. When combined to a recent proteomic analysis of the coral skeletal organic matrix (SOM), they enabled the identification of several skeletal matrix proteins, making A. millepora into an emerging model for biomineralization studies. Here we describe the skeletal microstructure of A. millepora skeleton, together with a functional and biochemical characterization of its occluded SOM that focuses on the protein and saccharidic moieties. The skeletal matrix proteins show a large range of isoelectric points, compositional patterns and signatures. Besides secreted proteins, there are a significant number of proteins with membrane attachment sites such as transmembrane domains and GPI anchors as well as proteins with integrin binding sites. These features show that the skeletal proteins must have strong adhesion properties in order to function in the calcifying space. Moreover this data suggest a molecular connection between the calcifying epithelium and the skeletal tissue during biocalcification. In terms of sugar moieties, the enrichment of the SOM in arabinose is striking, and the monosaccharide composition exhibits the same signature as that of mucus of acroporid corals. Finally, we observe that the interaction of the acetic acid soluble SOM on the morphology of in vitro grown CaCO3 crystals is very pronounced when compared with the calcifying matrices of some mollusks. In light of these results, we wish to commend Acropora millepora as a model for biocalcification studies in scleractinians, from molecular and structural viewpoints.


Bulletin De La Societe Geologique De France | 2000

Modalites sequentielles de la transgression aaleno-bajocienne sur le sud-est du Bassin parisien

Christophe Durlet; Jacques Thierry

Sedimentologic, biostratigraphic and diagenetic studies made on Middle Aalenian to Lowermost Bathonian deposits in 25 outcrops of the Burgundy High (southeastern Paris basin) lead to a sequence stratigraphy subdivision of the early Dogger record into 7 third order depositional sequences. These sequences make up a second-order transgressive phase whose lower limit is a tectonically enhanced unconformity (the Mid-Cimmerian unconformity), associated with a large scale uplift during the Upper Toarcian and the Lower Aalenian. In the largest outcrops, where the geometry of sedimentary bodies is observable at the hectometre to kilometre scale, the combination of diagenetic, biostratigraphical, spatial and sedimentologic studies is useful to understand the evolution of sediment distribution in the sequences. This approach also allows the measurement of sea level falls at the origin of the sequence boundaries. For example, we show that Lower Bajocian sequences end with decreases of accommodation space


Bulletin De La Societe Geologique De France | 2003

Mass mortality or exceptional fossilization ? The case of the early and middle Toarcian fossiliferous beds from the Digne-Les-Bains area (southeastern France)

Marc Floquet; Fabrizio Cecca; Matthieu Mestre; Francesco Macchioni; Myette Guiomar; François Baudin; Christophe Durlet; Yves Alméras

The latest Domerian to late Toarcian sedimentary series (from −190 Ma up to −180 Ma) from the « Reserve Geologique de Haute-Provence » (southeastern France) yields two kinds of remarkable fossiliferous beds. The greatest interest of the early Toarcian type is the occurrence of ichtyosaur remains (at least in six sites) among many other fossils such as ammonites, belemnites, bivalves, wood. The middle Toarcian type is specifically rich in ammonites and nautiluses. Litho- and biostratigraphical, palaeontological, sedimentological and geochemical analyses allow us to determine whether these fossiliferous beds are the results of mass mortalities, linked or not to biological crisis, or of exceptional fossilizations of organisms after normal mortality. The early Toarcian accumulations of fossils have been accurately dated from the middle part of the Serpentinum zone, Exaratum sub-zone pro-parte and Falciferum sub-zone pro-parte , strangewaysi and falciferum horizons. Thus, they were not connected to the so called Toarcian biological crisis which occurred previously (during the Semicelatum sub-zone). Organisms likely died according to a normal mortality rate during a time span that lasted around 700 to 800 k.y. All organisms appear to have been removed from their life environments and buried within siliciclastic sediments. Organisms and sediments were trapped owing to the creation of hemigrabens in an extensional tectonic regime, as evidenced by synsedimentary normal faults. Burying and good preservation, i. e. exceptional fossilization, were favoured by the hypoxic or anoxic conditions which prevailed at the sea floor, specifically during these times. High organic carbon content (up to 2.49 per cent) in the fossiliferous silty-quartzose marls proves hypoxia if not anoxia. All these facts were linked to a deepening and transgressive systems tract which succeeded a relative sea-level lowstand at the Pliensbachian-Toarcian boundary. The marine transgression probably reworked and shifted basinwards the siliciclastic sediments and wood remains which formed previously on the exposed land. Thus, continental remains were mixed with the marine fossils. Small scale hummocky cross stratifications in the terrigenous deposits show episodic occurrence of high hydrodynamics events. Such events, likely storms and associated currents, may have provoked the accumulations of dead marine organisms. The middle Toarcian accumulations of cephalopods are dated from the upper part of the Bifrons zone, Bifrons sub-zone pro-parte , lusitanicum and bifrons horizons. They are contained within 3 to 4 calcareous beds, 60 up to 85 centimetres thick in the whole. Since the corresponding deposition time span lasted around 850 k.y. up to 1 m.y., the sedimentation rate was very weak : about 1 centimetre or less each 1 k.y. Subsequently, these accumulations are regarded firstly as faunal condensations. The weak sedimentation rate is considered as linked to a major deepening and flooding event which led to sedimentary starvation in the involved Vocontian basin. Moreover, this phenomenon was probably favoured by a well known crisis of the carbonate production at that time. High values of manganese at the base of these condensed limestones are useful in correlating lithostratigraphic units of the same age in the entire basin. Previous studies gave rise to similar interpretations of these units, i. e. records of major flooding and wide connection to the oceanic domain. In addition, the taphonomic study indicates that many fossils were reworked due to episodes of high hydrodynamism, as indicated by erosion of internal molds of ammonites, and in addition to bioturbation. So, the accumulations may come also from faunal concentrations. Finally, this study shows that the inventory of the local and general conditions that govern fossilization must be done before interpreting all exceptional and widespread fossiliferous beds in terms of mass mortality or extinction.


Comptes Rendus De L Academie Des Sciences Serie Ii Fascicule A-sciences De La Terre Et Des Planetes | 1997

Tectonique synsédimentaire distensive dans les calcaires aaléno-bajociens du Seuil de Bourgogne (France)

Christophe Durlet; Thierry Jacquin; Marc Floquet

The analysis of Late Aalenian and Early Bajocian deposits from the Burgundy High and its surroundings shows that: the boundaries between the emerged areas or shallow marine carbonate platforms and the deeper marine marly depositional areas were determined by major faults; coral buildups formed at the top of blocks bounded by normal faults; and marine sediments have filled tension fractures within the limestones. Such features result from extensional synsedimentary tectonics of Middle Jurassic age linked to the Liguro-Tethyan rifting.


SpringerPlus | 2016

Impact of nickel mining in New Caledonia assessed by compositional data analysis of lichens

Camille Pasquet; Pauline Le Monier; Fabrice Monna; Christophe Durlet; Benjamin Brigaud; Rémi Losno; Carmela Chateau; Christine Laporte-Magoni; Peggy Gunkel-Grillon

The aim of this study is to explore the use of lichens as biomonitors of the impact of nickel mining and ore treatment on the atmosphere in the New Caledonian archipelago (South Pacific Ocean); both activities emitting also Co, Cr and possibly Fe. Metal contents were analysed in thirty-four epiphytic lichens, collected in the vicinity of the potential sources, and in places free from known historical mining. The highest Ni, Co, and Cr concentrations were, as expected, observed in lichens collected near ore deposits or treatment areas. The elemental composition in the lichens was explored by multivariate analysis, after appropriately transforming the variables (i.e. using compositional data analysis). The sample score of the first principal component (PC1) makes the largest (positive) multiplicative contribution to the log-ratios of metals originating from mining activities (Ni, Cr, Co) divided by Ti. The PC1 scores are used here as a surrogate of pollution levels related to mining and metallurgical activity. They can be viewed as synthetic indicators mapped to provide valuable information for the management and protection of ecosystems or, as a first step, to select locations where air filtration units could be installed, in the future, for air quality monitoring. However, as this approach drastically simplifies the problem, supplying a broadly efficient picture but little detail, recognizing the different sources of contamination may be difficult, more particularly when their chemical differences are subtle. It conveys only relative information: about ratios, not levels, and is therefore recommended as a preliminary step, in combination with close examination of raw concentration levels of lichens. Further validation using conventional air-monitoring by filter units should also prove beneficial.


AAPG Bulletin | 2017

Intact seismic-scale platforms and ramps in the Lower to Middle Jurassic of Morocco: Implications for stratal anatomy and lithofacies partitioning

Óscar Merino-Tomé; Giovanna Della Porta; Aurelien Pierre; Jeroen A. M. Kenter; Christophe Durlet; K. Verwer

The Jurassic carbonate platforms of the central High Atlas in Morocco are well known for several high-quality outcrops. In the central High Atlas, there are two complementary locations that offer critical lessons for our understanding of Jurassic carbonate system evolution in extensional basins: a Lower Jurassic high-relief, carbonate platform with steep slopes that developed on the footwall of a rotating fault block in an active half-graben (Djebel Bou Dahar [DBD]) and an upper Lower to Middle Jurassic low-angle prograding carbonate ramp rich in ooids (Amellago ramp [AR]). The DBD and AR outcrops provide superbly exposed, structurally intact, and fully accessible platform to basin transects. They provide valuable analogs for depositional geometries at reservoir and seismic scales that are highly relevant for hydrocarbon exploration and production. The DBD serves as an analog for isolated carbonate platforms developed in rift basins (particularly synrift carbonate platforms with a coral calcareous sponge and microbial boundstone facies belt in the upper slope and margin). The AR provides one of the rare examples whereby a large-scale oolitic ramp can be examined in great detail, providing an analog for a range of oolitic reservoirs, mostly Mesozoic.


Archive | 2018

Skeletal Organic Matrices in Molluscs: Origin, Evolution, Diagenesis

Frédéric Marin; Aurélien Chmiel; Takeshi Takeuchi; Irina Bundeleva; Christophe Durlet; Elias Samankassou; Davorin Medaković

The mollusc shell comprises a small amount of organic macromolecules, mostly proteins and polysaccharides, which, all together, constitute the skeletal organic matrix (SOM). In the recent years, the study of the SOM of about two dozens of mollusc species via transcriptomics and/or proteomics has led to the identification of hundreds of shell-associated proteins. This rapidly growing set of data allows several comparisons, shedding light on similarities and differences at the primary structure level and on some peculiar evolutionary mechanisms that may have affected SOM proteins. In addition, it constitutes a prerequisite for investigating the SOM repertoires of sub-fossils or fossil specimens, closely related to known extant species, in order to revisit diagenetic processes, i.e. how SOM proteins degrade during fossilization. These two aspects are briefly exemplified here: on the one hand, Aplysia californica, the sea hare, exhibits a vestigial internal shell that has kept a proteomic signature similar to that found in fully functional external shells. On the other hand, subfossil specimens of the giant clam Tridacna, collected in French Polynesia, precisely dated and analysed by proteomics for their SOM content, comprise several preserved proteins that can still be identified by their peptide signature, in spite of information losses likely due to diagenetic transformations.


Geology | 2011

Climatic ups and downs in a disturbed Jurassic world

Guillaume Dera; Benjamin Brigaud; Fabrice Monna; Rémi Laffont; Emmanuelle Pucéat; Jean-François Deconinck; Pierre Pellenard; Michael M. Joachimski; Christophe Durlet

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Véronique Darras

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Emmanuelle Vennin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Vincent Bichet

University of Franche-Comté

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Pierre Pellenard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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