The group is alocated within of the mountain belt that is the Central High Atlas, formed by the inversion of a rift from the
Triassic-Jurassic periods, due to
Cenozoic tectonic activity. Overall region's structure comes from four main tectonic phases: the pre-rift phase tied to the formation of
Pangaea, the syn-rift phase during the Late
Permian to Late Triassic, influenced by the opening of the
Atlantic Ocean and
Tethys Ocean, and the post-rift phase, where Jurassic-Cretaceous carbonate platforms formed. Several tectonic events during the Triassic-Jurassic boundary reactivated normal faults, leading to the dominance of marls during the Middle Liassic to Toarcian.
Azilal Formation Informally known as "Marnes chocolat" in the Azilal region, and represents a continental to marginal marine unit made up of red brown marls, silts (microsandstones) and conglomerates with centimetric quartz dragees. More marine-influenced sections near
Beni Mellal are composed by a succession of reddish-brown tints with terrigenous dominance:
sandstone, clays with paleosols and sandstone
limestones sometimes dolomitized, with marmorized levels in paleosols towards the N. Here, it evolves from lower sections with transition from sandstone to limestone and/or sandstone to clay, with a thin level of green marls locally rich in ostracods. Then is followed by subtidal term, represented by an oolitic limestone with fine lamellibranch bioclasts and variable percentages of
quartz and sandstone with calcareous cement and rare oolites drawing on the surface
mega-ripples of 3 to 5 m in wavelength. It ends with supratidal deposits made of coarse sandstone gradually changing to red
Marls with "fluer" structures and locally to paleosols with fluvial decametric channeling lenses. Oolitic grainstones and packstones, cross-stratified with alpha-type
ooids, dominate basal and upper parts, indicating high-energy
shoals. Oncolitic and
stromatolitic marly limestones, well-stratified with lenticular bioherms, occur medially. Massive bioclastic limestones with
crinoid-
polyp reefs and condensation zones are common. Green, indurated azoic marls and gritty sandstones form cm-mthick intercalations. Abrupt facies transitions reflect
halokinetic subsidence in a
rift basin. It was deposited in a shallow marine
peritidal-supratidal platform. In the Ait Hani area at
Tinejdad the "Aït Hani formation" has been suggested to be the upper part of the Azilal formation, but is part of the Bajocian units instead.
Tafraout Formation The Tafraout Formation can be divided in 4 members and is a 30–1000 m thick carbonate-siliciclastic unit, deposited in a Tethyan rift basin (The Central High Atlas Diapiric Province) with halokinetic influences. Consists of
oolitic and
bioclastic limestones, wackestones, silt marls, and quartz-rich sandstones with minor feldspar and carbonate debris with cross-stratifications, found in channels and bars, alongside greenish marls and micro-conglomerates. It overlies basal discontinuities and is capped by an emersion surface with desiccation cracks and ferruginized crusts. The oldest segment, previously know as "Amezraï Formation" is predominantly terrigenous and marked by quartz-rich sandstones, azoic green to yellow marls, and oolitic limestones ranging from oo-intramicrites to oosparites, and cross-bedded sandstones with
herringbone structures, asymmetrical ripples,
lignite debris, forming high-energy
deltaic channels and tidal bars. Nodular limestone bars, locally up to six meters thick, display compaction breccias and hardgrounds, while green marly sandstones highlight lagoonal retention. Synsedimentary faulting, combined with halokinetic subsidence, induced rapid facies changes and erosional breaks, with clastic input derived from uplifted Paleozoic substrates. Condensation horizons contain brachiopods, bivalves, and gastropods, but bioherms are absent. , with exposed facies of the Tafraout Group as "Upper Lias"|229x229px The succeeding interval, marked by lack of large-scale
slumping, shows stratigraphic shift into green marl-dominated sequences, intercalated with nodular,
stylolitic limestones ranging from biomicrocrites to recrystallized packstones, red sandstones, slumped channel fills, and bioclastic grainstones with oncolites from lagoonal to tidal flat settings with turbidite deposits, sometimes large coral colonies form early patch reefs. Marls contain fine lamination, terrigenous detritus, and distal turbidite layers, sometimes punctuated by thin lensing sandstones and microconglomerates. Above, the succession returns to more proximal facies, with quartz-rich sandstones, silt-marls, green marly and cross-bedded sandstones, oolitic/bioclastic limestones, including brachiopod-rich packstone bars and condensation zones with bivalves and gastropods, signifying ooid shoals and carbonate units ranging from biodetrital packstones to oolitic grainstones. Microfacies include tangential ooids, intraclasts,
peloids, and micritized carbonate fragments. Cross-bedded sandstones and ripple-marked surfaces with drying cracks and plant debris record emersion and supratidal influence. Microconglomerates incorporating metamorphic and magmatic clasts document tectonic supply from the basin margins, while high subsidence rates controlled turbidite influx and rapid lateral facies shifts. Thick carbonate bars and
lumachelle horizons represent reworked shoal and bar-top settings within a tectonically active shallow platform. The youngest member, by far the thickest, is fully carbonate-dominated, with marly micrites, oosparites, bioclastic limestones, and well-developed coral patch reefs attaining 10-40 meters in height. These reefal bodies, composed of framestones and boundstones, occur in stacked horizons and are often flanked by lamellibranch accumulations and coral–bivalve eventstones. Ooid limestones exhibit cross-bedding near reef margins, while emersion horizons with desiccation cracks mark episodic exposure, reflecting subtidal carbonate platforms and
lagoons. Stromatactis-like cavities and extensive bioturbation are widespread, reflecting synsedimentary cementation and rapid subsidence associated with halokinetic tectonics. Microconglomerates with older clasts add further evidence of syndepositional tectonism. Overall, this unit evolves from deltaic sand-dominated deposits to deeper marls, followed by shoal-associated grainstones and culminating in carbonate platforms with coral patch reefs. == Paleogeography ==