Pre-Priabonian Palaeogene formations in southwestern Bulgaria and northern Greece: stratigraphy and tectonic implications

1998 ◽  
Vol 135 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
IVAN S. ZAGORCHEV

The Paril Formation (South Pirin and Slavyanka Mountains, southwestern Bulgaria) and the Prodromos Formation (Orvilos and Menikion Mountains, northern Greece) consist of breccia and olistostrome built up predominantly of marble fragments from the Precambrian Dobrostan Marble Formation (Bulgaria) and its equivalent Bos-Dag Marble Formation (Greece). The breccia and olistostrome are interbedded with thin layers of calcarenites (with occasional marble pebbles), siltstones, sandstones and limestones. The Paril and Prodromos formations unconformably cover the Precambrian marbles, and are themselves covered unconformably by Miocene and Pliocene sediments (Nevrokop Formation). The rocks of the Paril Formation are intruded by the Palaeogene (Late Eocene–Early Oligocene) Teshovo granitoid pluton, and are deformed and preserved in the two limbs of a Palaeogene anticline cored by the Teshovo pluton (Teshovo anticline). The Palaeocene–Middle Eocene age of the formations is based on these contact relations, and on occasional finds of Tertiary pollen, as well as on correlations with similar formations of the Laki (Kroumovgrad) Group throughout the Rhodope region.The presence of Palaeogene sediments within the pre-Palaeogene Pirin–Pangaion structural zone invalidates the concept of a ‘Rhodope metamorphic core complex’ that supposedly has undergone Palaeogene amphibolite-facies regional metamorphism, and afterwards has been exhumed by rapid crustal extension in Late Oligocene–Miocene times along a regional detachment surface. Other Palaeogene formations of pre-Priabonian (Middle Eocene and/or Bartonian) or earliest Priabonian age occur at the base of the Palaeogene sections in the Mesta graben complex (Dobrinishka Formation) and the Padesh basin (Souhostrel and Komatinitsa formations). The deposition of coarse continental sediments grading into marine formations (Laki or Kroumovgrad Group) in the Rhodope region at the beginning of the Palaeogene Period marks the first intense fragmentation of the mid- to late Cretaceous orogen, in particular, of the thickened body of the Morava-Rhodope structural zone situated to the south of the Srednogorie zone. The Srednogorie zone itself was folded and uplifted in Late Cretaceous time, thus dividing Palaeocene–Middle Eocene flysch of the Louda Kamchiya trough to the north, from the newly formed East Rhodope–West Thrace depression to the south.

2000 ◽  
Vol 137 (4) ◽  
pp. 367-380 ◽  
Author(s):  
YONATHAN SHAKED ◽  
DOV AVIGAD ◽  
ZVI GARFUNKEL

The Alpine orogenic belt of the Hellenides has been strongly reworked by ductile and brittle extensional tectonics. Extensional structures have affected the central Aegean region and obliterated much of the original orogenic architecture since at least early Miocene times. In the area of Almyropotamos (on the island of Evia, flanking the western part of the Aegean) a unique remnant compressional nappe stack involving Tertiary metamorphic rocks has been preserved. This nappe sequence comprises a high-pressure rock unit on top of a lower grade unit. The upper unit (South Evia Blueschist Belt) is thought to be the westward continuation of the Cycladic blueschist belt metamorphosed at high-pressure conditions during Late Cretaceous–Eocene times. The underlying unit (the Almyropotamos Unit) is a continental margin sequence covered by a flysch and containing Lutetian nummulites, indicating that this unit accumulated sediments until at least late Eocene times.In the present study we analyse the petrology of the Almyropotamos nappe stack and define the P–T conditions of each of the different rock units exposed there. The presence of glaucophane, lawsonite rimmed by epidote, and jadeite (70 mol.%) suggest that peak P–T conditions in the South Evia Blueschist Belt reached approximately 10–12 kbar and 350–450 °C. Unlike previous studies, which estimated that the underlying Almyropotamos Unit reached only greenschist-facies conditions, glaucophane relics and Si-rich phengites were found by us in this unit. These indicate that high-pressure metamorphism and crustal thickening in this part of the Aegean lasted until at least the late Eocene or early Oligocene. We note that in this respect the architecture of southern Evia resembles that of northern Greece (Olympos, Ossa). Our structural data indicate that rock units in the Almyropotamos area record different folding phases, with the South Evia Blueschist Belt having a more complex fold history than the underlying Almyropotamos Unit. The entire nappe stack shares large-scale folds which are E–W trending, and locally overturned-to-the-south, and which may represent (at present coordinates) N–S contraction and nappe transport.


2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. SP33-SP45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhe Wu ◽  
Weilin Zhu ◽  
Lei Shao ◽  
Changhai Xu

The late Cretaceous to early Oligocene strata in the northern continental margin of the South China Sea (SCS) are significant for understanding the contemporaneous continental rifting of the margin prior to the opening of the central SCS oceanic basin. Using new seismic and drilling data, combined with previous results, we have identified three episodes of rifting from the late Cretaceous to early Oligocene based on analyses of major unconformities, tectonostratigraphic units, and sedimentary facies. The first episode of rifting that occurred only in the Pearl River Mouth (PRM) basin during the late Cretaceous to Paleocene is observed. During the early to middle Eocene, littoral-shallow lacustrine and fan-delta facies were distributed in some faulted half-grabens in the Qiongdongnan (QDN) basin, while deep lacustrine deposits widely developed in the PRM basin. During the late Eocene to early Oligocene, marine transgression propagated from the southeast into the QDN, southern PRM, and Taixinan basins. We have inferred that late Cretaceous to the middle Eocene rifting is characterized by uniform lithospheric stretching related to the retreat of the paleo-Pacific subduction zone, whereas the late Eocene to the early Oligocene rifting controlled by multiple factors is characterized by depth-dependent lithospheric extension. It is the differential rifting process that led to the differentiation in the types and distribution of source rocks in the basins of northern SCS margin.


Author(s):  
Ümitcan Erbil ◽  
Aral I. Okay ◽  
Aynur Hakyemez

AbstractLate Cenozoic was a period of large-scale extension in the Aegean. The extension is mainly recorded in the metamorphic core complexes with little data from the sedimentary sequences. The exception is the Thrace Basin in the northern Aegean, which has a continuous record of Middle Eocene to Oligocene marine sedimentation. In the Thrace Basin, the Late Oligocene–Early Miocene was characterized by north-northwest (N25°W) shortening leading to the termination of sedimentation and formation of large-scale folds. We studied the stratigraphy and structure of one of these folds, the Korudağ anticline. The Korudağ anticline has formed in the uppermost Eocene–Lower Oligocene siliciclastic turbidites with Early Oligocene (31.6 Ma zircon U–Pb age) acidic tuff beds. The turbidites are underlain by a thin sequence of Upper Eocene pelagic limestone. The Korudağ anticline is an east-northeast (N65°E) trending fault-propagation fold, 9 km wide and 22 km long and with a subhorizontal fold axis. It is asymmetric with shallowly-dipping northern and steeply-dipping southern limbs. Its geometry indicates about 1 km of shortening in a N25°W direction. The folded strata are unconformably overlain by Middle Miocene continental sandstones, which constrain the age of folding. The Korudağ anticline and other large folds in the Thrace Basin predate the inception of the North Anatolian Fault (NAF) by at least 12 myr. The Late Oligocene–Early Miocene (28–17 Ma) shortening in the Thrace Basin and elsewhere in the Balkans forms an interlude between two extensional periods, and is probably linked to changes in the subduction dynamics along the Hellenic trench.


1998 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 711 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert S. Hill ◽  
Leonie J. Scriven

A re-investigation of macrofossils previously referred to the extantpodocarpaceous genus Falcatifolium Laubenfels shows thatno records can be sustained. Falcatifolium australisD.R.Greenwood from Middle Eocene sediments in Victoria bears littleresemblance to extant species in the genus and is transferred to the newfossil genus Sigmaphyllum R.S.Hill & L.J.Scriven.Specimens from Early Oligocene sediments in Tasmania previously assigned toFalcatifolium are described as a second species ofSigmaphyllum, S. tasmanensisR.S.Hill & L.J.Scriven, and specimens from mid to late Eocene sediments inTasmania previously assigned to Falcatifolium do notbelong to that genus, although their true generic affinities are uncertain.Dispersed cuticle specimens from Late Eocene–Oligocene sediments inSouth Australia referred to Falcatifolium are notreliable records of the genus and require further investigation. However,Dacrycarpus eocenica D.R.Greenwood, from Middle Eocenesediments in Victoria is transferred to Falcatifolium,and is similar to the extant species F. angustumLaubenfels, which has a leaf morphology unusual for the genus.Falcatifolium eocenica (D.R.Greenwood) R.S.Hill & L.J.Scriven is the only reliable record of the genus in the Australian fossilrecord to date.


2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 2977-3018 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. M. Pascher ◽  
C. J. Hollis ◽  
S. M. Bohaty ◽  
G. Cortese ◽  
R. M. McKay

Abstract. The Eocene was characterised by "greenhouse" climate conditions that were gradually terminated by a long-term cooling trend through the middle and late Eocene. This long-term trend was determined by several large-scale climate perturbations that culminated in a shift to "ice-house" climates at the Eocene–Oligocene Transition. Geochemical and micropaleontological proxies suggest that tropical-to-subtropical sea-surface temperatures persisted into the late Eocene in the high-latitude Southwest Pacific Ocean. Here, we present radiolarian microfossil assemblage and foraminiferal oxygen and carbon stable isotope data from Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) Sites 277, 280, 281 and 283 from the middle Eocene to early Oligocene (~ 40–33 Ma) to identify oceanographic changes in the Southwest Pacific across this major transition in Earth's climate history. The Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum at ~ 40 Ma is characterised by a negative shift in foraminiferal oxygen isotope values and a radiolarian assemblage consisting of about 5 % of low latitude taxa Amphicraspedum prolixum group and Amphymenium murrayanum. In the early late Eocene at ~ 37 Ma, a positive oxygen isotope shift can be correlated to the Priabonian Oxygen Isotope Maximum (PrOM) event – a short-lived cooling event recognized throughout the Southern Ocean. Radiolarian abundance, diversity, and preservation increase during the middle of this event at Site 277 at the same time as diatoms. The PrOM and latest Eocene radiolarian assemblages are characterised by abundant high-latitude taxa. These high-latitude taxa also increase in abundance during the late Eocene and early Oligocene at DSDP Sites 280, 281 and 283 and are associated with very high diatom abundance. We therefore infer a~northward expansion of high-latitude radiolarian taxa onto the Campbell Plateau towards the end of the late Eocene. In the early Oligocene (~ 33 Ma) there is an overall decrease in radiolarian abundance and diversity at Site 277, and diatoms are absent. These data indicate that, once the Tasman Gateway was fully open in the early Oligocene, a frontal system similar to the present day was established, with nutrient-depleted subantarctic waters bathing the area around DSDP Site 277, resulting in a more oligotrophic siliceous plankton assemblage.


1997 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 359 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. A. Frakes

Grossplots are compilations of globally distributed palaeotemperature data onto latitude versus age plots, which are then contoured. The results specifically show the distribution of temperature over the globe and its variations over the Cretaceous to Middle Miocene interval. Data for continents and oceans are plotted separately in this investigation, and each such grossplot is in accord with the known climate changes of this time. The general scarcity of quantitative palaeotemperature information for Australia can be rectified by deriving, from the global continental grossplot, the relationship between mean annual temperature and latitude. When these are applied to the latitude band progressively occupied by Australia, the following observations can be made: (1) during the Early Cretaceous, the south-east of the continent was subjected to freezing wintertime temperatures; (2) peak warming of northern Australia was attained in the Turonian–Santonian, but this was followed by cooling later in the Cretaceous; (3) Early Tertiary warming until the Late Eocene particularly affected the northern half of the continent, but this region then underwent the most severe cooling in the Early Oligocene; (4) subsequently, the whole of the continent cooled uniformly from conditions only slightly warmer than at present. Despite Australia’s equatorward march, the Late Cretaceous to Palaeocene climates of the continent have been influenced more effectively by changes in the global climate state. However, global cooling since the Eocene has been less effective than drift in controlling the warming climate of Australia. The time–space distribution of precipitation over Australia is estimated from the global relationship between terrestrial temperature and rainfall. The Eocene experienced the heaviest rainfall (> 1560 mm year-1, in the north only), and the Eocene to Middle Miocene experienced moderately high rates (> 500 mm year-1 in the northern three-quarters of the continent). Tertiary brown coals in southern regions were formed in proximity to areas of high rainfall. Continentwide low rates (< 500 mm year-1; semi-arid) are suggested for the Cretaceous, except for wet conditions in the north during the Albian–Santonian and the Late Maastrichtian. Estimates of precipitation are subject to factors such as continentality and location of moisture sources, which cannot be evaluated at present.


2004 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 191-197 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. SELL ◽  
G. POUPEAU ◽  
J.M. GONZÁLEZ-CASADO ◽  
J. LÓPEZ-MARTÍNEZ

This paper reports the dating of apatite fission tracks in eleven rock samples from the South Shetland Archipelago, an island arc located to the north-west of the Antarctic Peninsula. Apatites from Livingston Island were dated as belonging to the Oligocene (25.8 Ma: metasediments, Miers Bluff Formation, Hurd Peninsula) through to the Miocene (18.8 Ma: tonalites, Barnard Point). Those from King George Island were slightly older, belonging to the Early Oligocene (32.5 Ma: granodiorites, Barton Peninsula). Towards the back-arc basin (Bransfield Basin), the apatite appears to be younger. This allows an opening rate of approximately 1.1 km Ma−1 (during the Miocene–Oligocene interval) to be calculated for Bransfield Basin. Optimization of the apatite data suggests cooling to 100 ± 10°C was coeval with the end of the main magmatic event in the South Shetland Arc (Oligocene), and indicates slightly different tectonic-exhumation histories for the different tectonic blocks.


Author(s):  
Olga B. Kuzmina ◽  
◽  
Natalia K. Lebedeva ◽  

The Upper Cretaceous and Paleogene sediments exposed in Borehole 9 (Troizk, Chelyabinsk Area) in the south of the Trans-Ural Region (Western Siberia) are studied by palynological methods. The BH9 has uncovered the Fadyushinskaya and Gan’kino formations of Upper Cretacious age and the Talitsa, Serov, Irbit, Chegan and Kurtamysh formations of Paleogene age. Nine dinocysts assemblages and nine spores and pollen assemblages were revealed. The Campanian, Maastrichtian, Late Paleocene, Low-Middle Eocene and Early Oligocene age of the sediments were substantiated.


2013 ◽  
Vol 87 (4) ◽  
pp. 589-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steffen Kiel ◽  
Kazutaka Amano

Bathymodiolin mussels are a group of bivalves associated with deep-sea hydrothermal vents and other reducing deep-sea habitats, and they have a particularly rich early Cenozoic fossil record in western Washington State, U.S.A. Here we recognize six species from middle Eocene to latest Oligocene deep-water methane seep deposits in western Washington. Two of them are new: Vulcanidas? goederti from the middle Eocene Humptulips Formation and Bathymodiolus (sensu lato) satsopensis from the late Oligocene part of the Lincoln Creek Formation. Very similar to the latter but more elongate are specimens from the early Oligocene Jansen Creek Member of the Makah Formation and are identified as B. (s.l.) aff. satsopensis. Bathymodiolus (s.l.) inouei Amano and Jenkins, 2011 is reported from the Lincoln Creek Formation. Idas? olympicus Kiel and Goedert, 2007 was previously known from late Eocene to Oligocene whale and wood falls in western Washington and is here reported from Oligocene seep deposits of the Makah and Pysht Formations. Vulcanidas? goederti occurs at a seep deposit from a paleodepth possibly as great as 2000 m, suggesting that its living relative, Vulcanidas insolatus Cosel and Marshall, 2010, which lives at depths of only 150–500 m, is derived from a deep-water ancestor. The bathymodiolins in western Washington indicate that the group originated at least in the middle Eocene and underwent a first diversification in the late Eocene to Oligocene. Early ontogenetic shells of all fossil species investigated so far, including the middle Eocene Vulcanidas? goederti, reflect planktotrophic larval development indicating that this developmental mode is an ancestral trait of bathymodiolins.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Kristina Michaela Pascher

<p>This thesis investigates the effect of climatic and oceanographic changes on the distribution of fossil radiolarian assemblages from the early Eocene to early Oligocene (~56–30 Ma) in the Southwest Pacific. Radiolarian assemblages have been analysed from a series of archived cores collected by the Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) and Ocean Drilling Program (ODP). The selected cores form a latitudinal transect designed to investigate the ecological change associated with the transition from the warm ‘greenhouse’ climate of the Eocene into the cooler Oligocene, when continental-scale glaciation is believed to have intiated in Antarctica. High-latitude sites were sampled on the Campbell Plateau (DSDP Site 277), Tasman Rise (DSDP sites 280 and 281) and the Tasman Sea (DSDP Site 283 and ODP Site 1172), while mid-latitude sites were sampled both to the west of New Zealand (DSDP sites 207, 206, 592) and east of New Zealand (ODP Site 1123). New foraminifer oxygen (δ¹⁸O) and carbon (δ¹³C) stable isotope data from DSDP sites 277, 207 and 592 are presented and provide additional age control and insights in the climatic and oceanographic changes in the Southwest Pacific during the early Eocene to early Oligocene.  This thesis contributes a comprehensive taxonomic review of Eocene radiolarian taxa with the intention of standardising nomenclature and to resolve synonymies. 213 out of 259 counting groups have been reviewed and assigned to species or subspecies level and 7 new species are yet to be described. All sites have been correlated to the Southern Hemisphere radiolarian zonation, from the upper Paleocene to upper Oligocene (RP6SH to RP17SH). Alternative datums for the base of RP10SH (LO of Artobotrys auriculaleporis) and the base of RP12SH (LO of Lophocyrtis longiventer) are proposed.  The early Eocene climatic optimum (EECO, ~53–49 Ma) can be identified by a negative excursion in foraminiferal δ¹⁸O values at Site 207. The radiolarian assemblages at sites 207 (paleolatitude ~46°S) and 277 (paleolatitude ~55°S) during the EECO are dominated by taxa with low-latitude affinities (Amphicraspedum spp. represents up to 89% of total fauna), but many typical low-latitude genera (e.g. Thyrsocyrtis, Podocyrtis, Phormocyrtis) are absent. Following the EECO, low-latitude taxa decrease at Site 207 and disappear at Site 277. Radiolarians are abundant and very diverse at mid-latitude sites 207 and 206 (paleolatitude ~42°S) during the middle Eocene, and low-latitude taxa are common (up to ~15% of the total fauna at Site 207 and ~10% at Site 206). The middle Eocene climatic optimum (MECO, ~40 Ma), although truncated by poor drilling recovery at Site 277, is identified by a negative shift in foraminiferal δ18O values at this site and is associated by a small increase in radiolarian taxa with low-latitude affinities (up to ~5% of total fauna).  Early in the late Eocene (~37 Ma), a positive shift in δ¹⁸O values at Site 277 is correlated with the Priabonian oxygen isotope maximum (PrOM). Within this cooling event, radiolarian abundance, diversity and preservation, as well as diatom abundance, increase abruptly at Site 277. A negative δ¹⁸O excursion above the PrOM is correlated to a late Eocene warming event (~36 Ma) and is referred to as the late Eocene climatic optimum (LECO). The LECO is identified using stable isotopes at sites 277 and 592. Radiolarian abundance and diversity decline within this event at Site 277 although taxa with low-latitude affinities increase (up to ~10% of total fauna). At Site 592, radiolarian-bearing sediments are only present during this event with up to ~6% low-latitude taxa. Apart from the LECO, late Eocene radiolarian assemblages at Site 277 are characterised by abundant high-latitude taxa. High-latitude taxa are also abundant during the late Eocene and Oligocene (~38–27 Ma) at DSDP sites 280, 281, 283, and ODP sites 1172 and 1123 and are associated with very high diatom abundance.  Radiolarian assemblages are used for reconstructing the evolution of oceanic fronts. The composition of the assemblages suggests that the oscillation between warm subtropical and cool subtropical conditions can be explained by the varying influence of the warm proto-East Australian Current and cold proto-Ross Gyre. In contrast to temperature reconstructions based on geochemical proxies (TEX₈₆, UK’₃₇ and Mg/Ca), which indicate tropical temperatures throughout most of the Eocene, radiolarians indicate warm subtropical conditions during the EECO. Warm surface water masses may have been transported by the proto-East Australian Current to ~55°S during the EECO. During the middle to late Eocene, cool subtropical conditions prevailed in the Southwest Pacific. Localised occurrences of abundant diatoms indicate upwelling areas close to the Tasman Rise in the middle Eocene. The proliferation of radiolarian assemblages and expansion of high-latitude taxa onto the Campbell Plateau in the latest Eocene is explained by a northward expansion of proto-Ross Gyre. In the early Oligocene (~32 Ma), there is an overall decrease in radiolarian abundance and diversity on the Campbell Plateau (Site 277) and diatoms disappear. Major hiatuses in the region indicate intensified bottom-water currents associated with the establishment of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. A frontal system similar to present day developed in the early Oligocene, with nutrient-depleted subantarctic waters bathing the southern Campbell Plateau, resulting in a more restricted radiolarian assemblage at Site 277.</p>


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