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Featured researches published by Pierre Cornet.


Geological Magazine | 2017

Insights into a million-year-scale Rhenohercynian carbonate platform evolution through a multi-disciplinary approach: example of a GIvetian carbonate record from Belgium

Damien Pas; A. C. Da Silva; Xavier Devleeschouwer; D. De Vleeschouwer; Pierre Cornet; Corentin Labaye; Frédéric Boulvain

In this paper we formulate answers to three important questions related to Givetian carbonate records and their use for reconstructing million-year-scale past palaeoenvironmental changes. First, we provide detailed illustrations of the fascinating diversity that shaped a significant shallow reefal platform during early to late Givetian time in the Rhenohercynian Ocean; secondly we improve the sedimentological model of the extensive Givetian carbonate platform in the Dinant Basin; and thirdly we evaluate the application of magnetic susceptibility as a tool for long-term trend correlations and palaeoenvironmental reconstructions. These goals are reached by making a sedimentological, geophysical and geochemical study of the La Thure section. Through the early–late Givetian interval we discerned 18 microfacies ranging from a homoclinal ramp to a discontinuously rimmed shelf and then a drowning shelf. The comparison of these sedimentological results with those published for the south of the Dinant Syncline allowed us to provide an up to date model of the vertical and lateral environmental development of one of the largest Givetian carbonate platforms in Europe. This comparison also increased the knowledge on the distribution of facies belts in the Dinant Basin and allowed us to highlight the Taghanic Event. Palaeoredox proxies reveal a substantial change in the oxygenation level, from oxygen-depleted to more oxic conditions, between middle and late Givetian time. We demonstrated the relationship between variation in magnetic susceptibility values and proxies for siliciclastic input (such as Si, Al). The La Thure section is considered a key section for the understanding of internal shelf settings bordering Laurussia9s southeastern margin.


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2015

Sedimentary development and magnetic susceptibility evolution of the Frasnian in Western Belgium (Dinant Synclinorium, La Thure section)

Damien Pas; A. C. Da Silva; Xavier Devleeschouwer; D. De Vleeschouwer; Corentin Labaye; Pierre Cornet; Jonathan Michel; Frédéric Boulvain

Abstract Recent opening of the La Thure quarry in Western Belgium allowed the collection of new data from a poorly outcropping area of the Belgian Frasnian platform. The studied section covers an interval extending from the falsiovalis to hassi s.l. Zones. Sedimentological analyses allowed the reconstruction of depositional settings in the northwestern part of the Dinant Synclinorium after the demise of the extended Givetian carbonate platform. Two depositional models are distinguished: (a) siliciclastic drowned platform during the Early Frasnian; and (b) a fore-reef depositional setting belonging to a rimmed shelf during the Middle Frasnian. Moreover, interpreted depositional settings in the northwestern part of the Dinant Synclinorium allowed to constraint the direction of the main facies belts for the Belgian Frasnian platform. Combination of MS and geochemistry demonstrates the inherent-parallel link existing between variation in MS values and proxy for terrestrial input (such as Si and Al). This observation means that, despite the remagnetization occurring within the Belgian Frasnian lithologies, the main trends in the MS signal from the La Thure section still reflect some syn-sedimentary conditions. The increase in MS and clastic input proxies recorded in distal fore-reef deposit within the punctata Zone are likely to be considered as enhanced by rapid and strong shallowing events recognized in the ‘puncata Event’ interval.


Facies | 2004

Reconstructing atoll-like mounds from the Frasnian of Belgium

Frédéric Boulvain; Pierre Cornet; Anne-Christine Da Silva; Gwenaël Delaite; Bernard Demany; Marc Humblet; Marjorie Renard; Marie Coen-Aubert


Facies | 2013

Sedimentary development of a continuous Middle Devonian to Mississippian section from the fore-reef fringe of the Brilon Reef Complex (Rheinisches Schiefergebirge, Germany)

Damien Pas; Anne-Christine Da Silva; Pierre Cornet; Pierre Bultynck; Peter Königshof; Frédéric Boulvain


Archive | 2016

The Siluro-Devonian sedimentary record of the Tassili n’Ajjer (SE Algeria): new insights from sedimentology and stratigraphy

Hocine Djouder; Frédéric Boulvain; Anne-Christine Da Silva; Pierre Cornet; Sebastian Lüning; Geoffray Musial


Archive | 2014

Tassili n’Ajjer (Sahara Oriental Algérien) – Résultats préliminaires sur le Silurien-Dévonien

Hocine Djouder; Frédéric Boulvain; Anne-Christine Da Silva; Pierre Cornet; Sebastian Lüning


Berichte des Institutes für Erdwissenschaften der Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz | 2014

Diversity and correlation of Givetian records in southern Belgium

Damien Pas; Geoffrey Poulain; Corentin Labaye; Anne-Christine Da Silva; Pierre Cornet; Xavier Devleeschouwer; D. De Vleeschouwer; Jindra Hladil; Frédéric Boulvain


Archive | 2013

SEDIMENTARY DEVELOPMENT AND MAGNETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY OF THE FRASNIAN CARBONATE PLATFORM IN WESTERN BELGIUM (DINANT SYNCLINORIUM, LA THURE SECTION)

Damien Pas; Anne-Christine Da Silva; Corentin Labaye; Pierre Cornet; Jonathan Michel; Xavier Devleeschouwer; David De Vleeschouwer; Frédéric Boulvain


Archive | 2012

Sedimentary development and correlation of Mid-Late Devonian fore-reef deposits from Central Europe

Damien Pas; Anne-Christine Da Silva; Pierre Cornet; Thomas J. Suttner; Peter Königshof; Frédéric Boulvain; Pierre Bultynck


Archive | 2012

Sedimentary development of a continuous Middle Givetian to Lower Carboniferous section from the fore-reef fringe of the Brilon reef-complex (Rheinisches Schiefergebirge, Germany)

Damien Pas; Anne-Christine Da Silva; Pierre Cornet; Pierre Bultynck; Peter Königshof; Frédéric Boulvain

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Peter Königshof

American Museum of Natural History

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Pierre Bultynck

Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences

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Xavier Devleeschouwer

Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences

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