scholarly journals Middle to Late Jurassic carbonate-biosiliceous sedimentation and palaeoenvironment in the Tethyan Fatricum Domain, Krížna Nappe, Tatra Mts, Western Carpathians

Author(s):  
Renata Jach ◽  
Daniela Reháková
2013 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 613-616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beata Cykowska-Marzencka

Abstract The paper gives six new records of the rare coprophilous altimontane moss species Tetraplodon angustatus (Hedw.) Bruch & Schimp. from the Polish Tatra Mts in the Western Carpathians. The ecology and current distribution of the species in the Tatras are described.


2013 ◽  
Vol 107 (4) ◽  
pp. 609-627 ◽  
Author(s):  
Krzysztof Szopa ◽  
Aleksandra Gawęda ◽  
Axel Müller ◽  
Magdalena Sikorska

Biologia ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anton Petrík ◽  
Zuzana Dúbravcová ◽  
Ivan Jarolímek ◽  
Ján Kliment ◽  
Jozef Šibík ◽  
...  

AbstractWe present a syntaxonomic account of the communities of the alliances of Oxytropido-Elynion Br.-Bl. 1949 and Festucion versicoloris Krajina 1933 from Western Carpathians. Both alliances comprise naked-rush, cushion form and dwarf-shrub heath communities typical of wind-exposed habitats occurring at the highest altitudes of the Tatra Mts. They represent a relic vegetation of the cold stages of the Pleistocene (probably Late Glacial Maximum) and they can be classified within the class of Carici rupestris-Kobresietea bellardii Ohba 1974. A set of relevés was subject to numerical-classification analysis. Floristics and ecology of the communities were characterised and the relationships to similar syntaxa were discussed.The Oxytropido-Elynion is restricted to the extreme ridge positions in the highest altitudes of the Belianske Tatry Mts. Five associations were distinguished, such as the Pyrolo carpaticae-Salicetum reticulatae, the Festuco versicoloris-Oreochloetum distichae, the Festucetum versicoloris, the Oxytropido carpaticae-Elynetum myosuroides and the Drabo siliquosae-Festucetum versicoloris.The Festucion versicoloris is limited to the mylonite zone of the alpine and subnival belt of the Vysoké Tatry and Západné Tatry Mts (and found as rare in the Nízke Tatry Mts). The stands of these communities prefer terraces of steep rocky faces and cliffs and stabilised small-grained screes below the cliffs. Within this alliance, three associations were described, including the Agrostio alpinae-Festucetum versicoloris, the Silenetum acaulis and the Salicetum kitaibelianae.


2013 ◽  
Vol 64 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elżbieta Morycowa ◽  
Barbara Olszewska

Abstract The paper deals with benthic foraminifera occurring with the scleractinian corals in the Jurassic biohermal and peribiohermal coral-bearing limestones of the Vršatec area (Czorsztyn Succession, Slovak Pieniny Klippen Belt). The coral community is dominated by branching forms of the genus Thecosmilia. Co-occurring abundant benthic foraminifera belong to the species Rumanolina seiboldi, R. elevata, Paalzowella turbinella and Troglotella incrustans. The coral-bearing limestones were initially assigned to the Oxfordian on the basis of the microfacies analyses and bivalve and scleractinian faunas. In recent papers they are assigned to the Bajocian on the basis of ammonites found in the neptunic dykes and stratigraphic superimposition criteria. However, the stratigraphic distribution of the majority of the identified foraminifera indicates that like most scleractinian coral taxa they are not known earlier than in the Late Jurassic. The Late Jurassic age of these coral-bearing limestones is also suggested by an encrusting microproblematic organism Iberopora bodeuri.


2015 ◽  
Vol 66 (6) ◽  
pp. 473-487 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans-Jürgen Gawlick ◽  
Roman Aubrecht ◽  
Felix Schlagintweit ◽  
Sigrid Missoni ◽  
Dušan Plašienka

Abstract The causes for the Middle to Late Jurassic tectonic processes in the Northern Calcareous Alps are still controversially discussed. There are several contrasting models for these processes, formerly designated “Jurassic gravitational tectonics”. Whereas in the Dinarides or the Western Carpathians Jurassic ophiolite obduction and a Jurassic mountain building process with nappe thrusting is widely accepted, equivalent processes are still questioned for the Eastern Alps. For the Northern Calcareous Alps, an Early Cretaceous nappe thrusting process is widely favoured instead of a Jurassic one, obviously all other Jurassic features are nearly identical in the Northern Calcareous Alps, the Western Carpathians and the Dinarides. In contrast, the Jurassic basin evolutionary processes, as best documented in the Northern Calcareous Alps, were in recent times adopted to explain the Jurassic tectonic processes in the Carpathians and Dinarides. Whereas in the Western Carpathians Neotethys oceanic material is incorporated in the mélanges and in the Dinarides huge ophiolite nappes are preserved above the Jurassic basin fills and mélanges, Jurassic ophiolites or ophiolitic remains are not clearly documented in the Northern Calcareous Alps. Here we present chrome spinel analyses of ophiolitic detritic material from Kimmeridgian allodapic limestones in the central Northern Calcareous Alps. The Kimmeridgian age is proven by the occurrence of the benthic foraminifera Protopeneroplis striata and Labyrinthina mirabilis, the dasycladalean algae Salpingoporella pygmea, and the alga incertae sedis Pseudolithocodium carpathicum. From the geochemical composition the analysed spinels are pleonastes and show a dominance of Al-chromites (Fe3+–Cr3+–Al3+ diagram). In the Mg/(Mg+ Fe2+) vs. Cr/(Cr+ Al) diagram they can be classified as type II ophiolites and in the TiO2 vs. Al2O3 diagram they plot into the SSZ peridotite field. All together this points to a harzburgite provenance of the analysed spinels as known from the Jurassic suprasubduction ophiolites well preserved in the Dinarides/Albanides. These data clearly indicate Late Jurassic erosion of obducted ophiolites before their final sealing by the Late Jurassic–earliest Cretaceous carbonate platform pattern.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacek Szczygieł ◽  
Helena Hercman ◽  
Gregory Hoke ◽  
Michał Gąsiorowski ◽  
Marcin Błaszczyk ◽  
...  

<p>The Tatra mountains, the northernmost portion of the Central Western Carpathians, host a stunning alpine landscape despite an average elevation that rises 1.4 km above the surrounding lowlands. Regional geomorphology studies on both sides of the range correlate various landforms interpreted to be glacial in origin with all each of the eight major Alpine glacial  events based largely landscape position, and in some cases geochronologic constraints. This regional relative chronology assumes that wet-based mountain glaciers are efficient agents of erosion and each successive glaciation lowered the valleys within the Tatra. While the tendency of subsequent glaciations to obscure evidence of previous events makes it difficult to study the work done by past glacial episodes, the cave networks on the northern side of the Tatra offer a way to evaluate the amount and timing of valley lowering with U-series dating of speleothems. Epiphreatic and paleophreatic caves that developed near the water table and dried out as valley deepening occurred can serve as excellent recorders of the valley incision history.</p><p>Speleothems were collected from a number of cave levels present throughout the northern Tatra, of which only a subset were suitable for U-series geochronology. The oldest speleothems collected in active epiphreatic passages on the valley bottom level from each valley are consistently between 284-325 ka (MIS 8-9). This shows that the modern karst drainage system of the Tatra was established prior to the late Middle Pleistocene, and the cave conduits changed to epiphreatic or vadose conditions between 280 and 330 ka. Since the lowest cave level is at or below the modern valley floor, we can conclude that no valley incision occurred after ~330 ka, which includes both the penultimate and last glaciations periods. Clearly, the regional glacial chronologies in the Tatra must be reassessed. The implications of our findings demonstrate that the assumption of successive valley lowering should not be assumed and that even the extensive MIS2 glaciation did not result in valley lowering despite its size.</p>


2011 ◽  
Vol 103 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 19-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jolanta Burda ◽  
Aleksandra Gawęda ◽  
Urs Klötzli

2011 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
Piotr Górski

The article presents the spread of the liverwort <em>Tetralophozia setiformis</em> in the Polish Tatra Mts (Western Carpathians). In the years 1814-1957 only four localities of this plant have been found in High Tatra Mts. Since the 90-ties, an increase in recording of <em>T. setiformis</em> has been noticed, including the first locality in Western Tatra Mts. Currently, there are 17 localities of <em>T. setiformis</em> in the Polish Tatra Mts. In many of them, the plant occurs abundantly; it also remains in the places of its first records. The species has a narrow ecological scale. It is attached to rock blocks, mostly of north exposition. It creates small, single-species turfs plaited in mossy pillows of alpine grasslands of Oreochloo distichae-Juncetum trifidi racomitrietosum lanuginosi hung among rocks.


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