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OKAY, ARAL I., ÖZCAN, ERCAN, HAKYEMEZ, AYNUR, SIYAKO, MUZAFFER, SUNAL, GÜRSEL, KYLANDER-CLARK, ANDREW R.C. (2019) The Thrace Basin and the Black Sea: the Eocene–Oligocene marine connection. Geological Magazine, 156 (1) 39-61 doi:10.1017/s0016756817000772

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleThe Thrace Basin and the Black Sea: the Eocene–Oligocene marine connection
JournalGeological Magazine
AuthorsOKAY, ARAL I.Author
ÖZCAN, ERCANAuthor
HAKYEMEZ, AYNURAuthor
SIYAKO, MUZAFFERAuthor
SUNAL, GÜRSELAuthor
KYLANDER-CLARK, ANDREW R.C.Author
Year2019 (January)Volume156
Issue1
PublisherCambridge University Press (CUP)
DOIdoi:10.1017/s0016756817000772Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID261323Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:261323:3
GUID0
Full ReferenceOKAY, ARAL I., ÖZCAN, ERCAN, HAKYEMEZ, AYNUR, SIYAKO, MUZAFFER, SUNAL, GÜRSEL, KYLANDER-CLARK, ANDREW R.C. (2019) The Thrace Basin and the Black Sea: the Eocene–Oligocene marine connection. Geological Magazine, 156 (1) 39-61 doi:10.1017/s0016756817000772
Plain TextOKAY, ARAL I., ÖZCAN, ERCAN, HAKYEMEZ, AYNUR, SIYAKO, MUZAFFER, SUNAL, GÜRSEL, KYLANDER-CLARK, ANDREW R.C. (2019) The Thrace Basin and the Black Sea: the Eocene–Oligocene marine connection. Geological Magazine, 156 (1) 39-61 doi:10.1017/s0016756817000772
In(2019, January) Geological Magazine Vol. 156 (1) Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Abstract/NotesAbstractThe Late Cretaceous – Recent West Black Sea Basin and the Eocene–Oligocene Thrace Basin are separated by the Strandja arch comprising metamorphic and magmatic rocks. Since Late Cretaceous time the Strandja arch formed a palaeo-high separating the two basins which accumulated clastic sediment of >9 km thickness. During late Eocene – early Oligocene time the marine connection between these basins existed through the Çatalca gap west of Istanbul. The Çatalca gap lies on the damage zone of a major Cretaceous strike-slip fault; it formed a 15 km wide marine gateway, where carbonate-rich sediments of thickness c. 350 m were deposited. The sequence consists of upper Eocene shallow marine limestones (SBZ18-20) overlain by upper Eocene – lower Oligocene (P16-P19 zones) pelagic marl with a rich fauna of planktonic foraminifera; the marls are intercalated with 31–32 Ma acidic tuff and calc-arenite beds. The Çatalca gap is bounded in the west by a major normal fault, which marks the eastern boundary of the Thrace Basin. Seismic reflection profiles, well data and zircon U–Pb ages indicate that the Thrace Basin sequence west of the fault is late Eocene – middle Oligocene (37–27 Ma) in age and that the fault has accommodated 2 km of subsidence. Although there was a marine connection between the West Black Sea and Thrace basins during late Eocene – early Oligocene time, no significant exchange of clastic sediment took place. Sedimentation in the Çatalca gap ended abruptly during early Oligocene time by uplift, and this eventually led to the paralic conditions in the Thrace Basin.


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