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Featured researches published by Milvio Fazzuoli.


Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia (Research In Paleontology and Stratigraphy) | 2004

TRANSITION FROM CARBONATE PLATFORM TO PELAGIC DEPOSITION (MID JURASSIC- LATE CRETACEOUS), VOURINOS MASSIF, NORTHERN GREECE

Nicolaos Carras; Milvio Fazzuoli; Adonis Photiades

A Jurassic- Cretaceous carbonate succession crops out along the Zyghosti Rema, Kozani (Northern Greece). The substratum consists of the ophiolitic succession of the Vourinos Massif (Pelagonian Domain): serpentinites tectonically overlain by basalts, with thin lenses of radiolarian cherts of middle Bathonian age. The contact with the overlying Jurassic limestones is tectonic. Eight informal units have been distinguished within the Mesozoic limestones, from the base upwards. (A) bioclastic, intraclastic and oolitic packstone (Callovian- Oxfordian). (B) bioclastic packstone and coral boundstone (Oxfordian )


Geological Field Trips | 2013

The Elba Island: an intriguing geological puzzle in the Northern Tyrrhenian Sea

Enrico Pandeli; Gianfranco Principi; Valerio Bortolotti; Marco Benvenuti; Milvio Fazzuoli; Andrea Dini; Franco Fanucci; Francesco Menna; Giuseppe Nirta

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Bollettino Della Societa Geologica Italiana | 2018

The Scaglia Toscana Formation of the Monti del Chianti: new lithostratigraphic and biostratigraphic data

Enrico Pandeli; Milvio Fazzuoli; Fabio Sandrelli; Roberto Mazzei; Simonetta Monechi; Marisa Nocchi; Ivan Martini; G. Valleri

The Scaglia Toscana Formation (Scisti Policromi Auctt.) is one of the most investigated formation of the Tuscane Nappe. The Formation is widely exposed in the Chianti Mounts and despite the number of studies in this area, some aspects remain poorly known and debated. In this paper new litho- and bio-stratigraphic data from eight key-sections distributed over the entire area are provided and discussed in order to clarify the stratigraphic relationshpis among different lithostratigraphic members, as well as the depositional ages of each member. The Formation deposited in the Cretaceous-Oligocene time interval and it can be subdivided into five lithostratigraphic members: i) the Argilliti di Brolio (wine-red shales with sporadic siliceous calcilutites and rare interbedded cherts); ii) the Marne del Sugame (red and pink marls, calcareous marls and marly limestones with interbedded calcarenitic beds and ruditic lens-shaped bodies including calcareous-siliceous clasts); iii) the Argilliti di Cintoia (grey-green to black shales, locally with manganese-rich siliceous calcilutites and cherts); iv) the Calcareniti di Montegrossi (thin beds of calcilutites and calcarenites with varicoloured shaly-marly interbeds); and v) the Argilliti e Calcareniti di Dudda (alternating thin beds of calcilutites and calcarenites with varicoloured shaly-marly interbeds). These members deposited in a marine environment and have been interpreted as deposited in a turbiditic system, in which shaly and calcareous turbiditic members have been attributed to a basin plain below the CCD, whereas the marls and marly limestones of the Marne del Sugame Member can be settled in a slope/ramp environment above or close to the CCD. Furthermore, the combination of these new data with structural informations coming from literatures allowed to a better paleogeographic reconstruction of the paleobasin. In order to better explain these data, the paper is accompanied by two geological maps realized in the past but never distributed. The two geological maps, at the scale of 1:25,000, cover the whole area from the Cintoia (south of Florence) to the San Gusme (north of Siena) villages.


Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia (Research In Paleontology and Stratigraphy) | 2005

THE MID- JURASSIC MARINE TRANSGRESSION IN EAST AFRICA: NEW DATA ON THE DEPOSITIONAL ENVIRONMENT AND AGE OF THE LOWER KAMBE FORMATION (AALENIAN TO BAJOCIAN) IN THE MOMBASA AREA (S.E. KENYA)

Maurizio Chiocchini; Milvio Fazzuoli; Viviana Reale

The Lower Kambe Formation crops out from Mombasa towards the northeast, along the coastal area of Kenya; it was deposited during the first phases of the Middle Jurassic marine transgression. The lithology of the Lower Kambe Fm. varies passing from the southern areas towards the north: near Mombasa, this formation consists of an alternance of calcareous and marly intervals; the marly levels become thinner and tend to disappear towards the north, where the succession becomes entirely calcareous and shows features of a carbonate platform. According to field observations, in the Mwachi River area near Mombasa, four lithological units crop out, that we consider as informal members, namely from bottom : (a) Calcarenitic member (Cam), well bedded calcarenites and some conglomerates; (b) Lower Shaly member (LSm), marly shales with marly limestone beds; (c) Conglomeratic member (Cgm), alternance of calcarenitic beds and levels of conglomerates; (d) Upper Shaly member (USm), marly shales and siltstones with thin beds of calcilutites and quartz sandstones. The sedimentological features of the Cam point to a shoreline environment, possibly shoreface; those of the LSm to a mid/outer ramp; the onset of tectonically active slopes is evidenced by the occurrence of gravity flow structures in the fine-grained sediments. At the top of LSm a marked shallowing of the deposition environment occurred. The Cgm was deposited on a inner ramp, where polymictic coarse deposits (arenaceous, shaly and carbonate clasts) indicating a strong erosion of the coastal areas, were intercalated to the wave-winnowed calcarenites; also the calcarenitic upper portion of the Cgm was deposited on an high energy inner ramp depositional environment. Upwards, a deepening occurred, as the fine sediments of the USm point to a mid/outer ramp. The age of the Lower Kambe Formation has been determined by several Authors on the basis of ammonites; in this work calcareous nannofossils stratigraphy is provided. The age given by ammonites is Bajocian; the calcareous nannofossil assemblage, found in various localities along the Mwachi River, indicates an Aalenian - Bajocian p.p. age. The discrepancy is possibly due to a complex geological situation (faults ?) in the localities with ammonites.


Ofioliti | 2001

GEOLOGY OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN ELBA ISLAND, ITALY

Valerio Bortolotti; Milvio Fazzuoli; Enrico Pandeli; Gianfranco Principi; Amedeo Babbini; Simone Corti


Ofioliti | 2003

THE ARGOLIS PENINSULA IN THE PALAEOGEOGRAPHIC AND GEODYNAMIC FRAME OF THE HELLENIDES

Valerio Bortolotti; Nicolas Carras; Marco Chiari; Milvio Fazzuoli; Marta Marcucci; Adonis Photiades; Gianfranco Principi


Ofioliti | 2002

NEW GEOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS AND BIOSTRATIGRAPHIC DATA ON THE ARGOLIS PENINSULA: PALAEOGEOGRAPHIC AND GEODYNAMIC IMPLICATIONS

Valerio Bortolotti; Nicolas Carras; Marco Chiari; Milvio Fazzuoli; Marta Marcucci; Adonis Photiades; Gianfranco Principi


Mémoires du Muséum national d'histoire naturelle | 1998

New data on the Jurassic and Neogene sedimentation in the Danakil Horst and Northern Afar Depression, Eritrea

Mario Sagri; Ernesto Abbate; Augusto Azzaroli; Maria Laura Balestrieri; Marco Benvenuti; Piero Bruni; Milvio Fazzuoli; G. Ficcarelli; M. Marcucci; Mauro Papini; Giulio Pavia; Viviana Reale; Lorenzo Rook; Tewelde Medhin Tecle


Bollettino Della Societa Geologica Italiana | 1998

GEOLOGIA DEL NUCLEO MESOZOICO DELLA VAL DI LIMA (PROVINCE DI PISTOIA E LUCCA, APPENNINO SETTENTRIONALE) NOTE ILLUSTRATIVE DELLA CARTA GEOLOGICA (SCALA 1 :25.000)

Milvio Fazzuoli; Federico Sani; G. Ferrini; Carlos Alberto Garzonio; Giovanni Sguazzoni; S. Becarelli; G. Burchietti; G. Mannori


Ofioliti | 2009

THE OPHIOLITE-BEARING MÉLANGE IN THE EARLY TERTIARY PINDOS FLYSCH OF ETOLIA (CENTRAL GREECE)

Valerio Bortolotti; Nicola Carras; Marco Chiari; Milvio Fazzuoli; Marta Marcucci; Giuseppe Nirta; Gianfranco Principi; Emilio Saccani

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Piero Bruni

University of Florence

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