13 research outputs found
Discovery of the Badenian evaporites inside the Carpathian Arc: implications for global climate change and Paratethys salinity
Abstract
Massive evaporites were discovered in the Soltvadkert Trough (Great Plain, Hungary) correlating to the Badenian Salinity Crisis (13.8 Ma, Middle Miocene) on the basis of nannoplankton and foraminifera biostratigraphy. This new occurrence from Hungary previously thought to be devoid of evaporites is part of a growing body of evidence of evaporitic basins inside the Carpathian Arc. We suggest the presence of evaporites perhaps in the entire Central Paratethys during the salinity crisis. Different scenarios are suggested for what subsequently happened to these evaporites to explain their presence or absence in the geological record. Where they are present, scenario A suggests that they were preserved in subsiding, deep basins overlain by younger sediments that protected the evaporites from reworking, like in the studied area. Where they are absent, scenario B suggests recycling. Scenario B explains how the supposedly brackish Sarmatian could have been hyper/normal saline locally by providing a source of the excess salt from the reworking and dissolving of BSC halite into seawater. These scenarios suggest a much larger amount of evaporites locked up in the Central Paratethys during the salinity crisis then previously thought, probably contributing to the step-like nature of cooling of the Mid Miocene Climate Transition, the coeval Mi3b.</jats:p
The oldest Triassic platform margin reef from the Alpine - Carpathian region (Aggtelek, NE Hungary): platform evolution, reefal biota and biostratigraphic framework
The 1:10,000 scale mapping of the southern part of the Aggtelek Plateau
(Western Carpathians, Silica Nappe, NE Hungary) and the study of five
sections revealed two Middle Triassic reef bodies.
In the late Pelsonian the uniform Steinalm Platform was drowned and
dissected due to the Reifling Event. A connection with the open sea was
established, indicated by the appearance of gladigondolellid conodonts
from the early Illyrian. Basins and highs were formed. In the NW part of
the studied area lower - middle? Illyrian basinal carbonates were
followed by a platform margin reef (early? - middle Illyrian; reef stage
1) developed on a morphological high. This is the oldest known Triassic
platform margin reef within the Alpine-Carpathian region. The reef
association is dominated by sphinctozoans and microproblematics. The
fossils are characteristic of the Wetterstein - type reef communities.
Differently from this in the SE part of the studied region a basin
existed from the late Pelsonian until the early Ladinian. During the
late Illyrian - early Ladinian, the reef prograded to the SE, and reef
stage 2 was established. Meanwhile, on the NW part of the platform a
lagoon was formed behind the reef.
Based on our palaeontological study the stratigraphic range of
Colospongia catenulata, Follicatena cautica, Solenolmia manon manon,
Vesicocaulis oenipontanus must be extended down to the middle Illyrian.
Synsedimentary tectonics were detected in the 1. Binodosus Subzone, 2.
Trinodosus Zone - the most part of the Reitzi Zone, 3. Avisianum
Subzone
Triassic metasediments in the internal Dinarides (Kopaonik area, southern Serbia) : stratigraphy, paleogeographic and tectonic significance
Strongly deformed and metamorphosed sediments in the Studenica Valley and Kopaonik area in southern Serbia expose the easternmost occurrences of Triassic sediments in the Dinarides. In these areas, Upper Paleozoic terrigenous sediments are overlain by Lower Triassic siliciclastics and limestones and by Anisian shallow-water carbonates. A pronounced facies change to hemipelagic and distal turbiditic, cherty metalimestones (Kopaonik Formation) testifies a Late Anisian drowning of the former shallow-water carbonate shelf. Sedimentation of the Kopaonik Formation was contemporaneous with shallow-water carbonate production on nearby carbonate platforms that were the source areas of diluted turbidity currents reaching the depositional area of this formation. The Kopaonik Formation was dated by conodont faunas as Late Anisian to Norian and possibly extends into the Early Jurassic. It is therefore considered an equivalent of the grey Hallstatt facies of the Eastern Alps, the Western Carpathians, and the Albanides—Hellenides. The coeval carbonate platforms were generally situated in more proximal areas of the Adriatic margin, whereas the distal margin was dominated by hemipelagic/pelagic and distal turbiditic sedimentation, facing the evolving Neotethys Ocean to the east. A similar arrangement of Triassic facies belts can be recognized all along the evolving Meliata-Maliac- Vardar branch of Neotethys, which is in line with a ‘one-ocean-hypothesis’ for the Dinarides: all the ophiolites presently located southwest of the Drina-Ivanjica and Kopaonik thrust sheets are derived from an area to the east, and the Drina-Ivanjica and Kopaonik units emerge in tectonic windows from below this ophiolite nappe. On the base of the Triassic facies distribution we see neither argument for an independent Dinaridic Ocean nor evidence for isolated terranes or blocks