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From Peri-Tethys to Paratethys: Basin restriction and anoxia in central Eurasia linked to volcanic belts in Iran

Authors :
van der Boon, Annique
van der Boon, Annique
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

From the Alps in western Europe to the great steppes of Kazakhstan, the former Paratethys Sea once covered a vast area of our planet, of which the Black Sea, Caspian Sea and Aral lake are today’s remnants. The Paratethys formed as the Tethys ocean gradually closed, and was known as ‘Peri-Tethys’ until the late Eocene. The Peri-Tethys transformed into the Paratethys after it became an isolated basin from the Oligocene onwards. Initially, Laskarev (1924) coined the term Paratethys, describing the environment of Miocene sediments, containing peculiar fossils that developed in this isolated environment. Later, also Oligocene strata were included, which show the first isolation from the Tethys ocean. The birth of the Paratethys is characterised by a change in sedimentation reflecting well-oxygenated bottom waters during the Eocene, towards low-oxygen environments in the Oligocene (Maikop Series). In my thesis, we set out to unravel the roles of tectonic and eustatic mechanisms on the transition from Peri-Tethys to Paratethys and onset of oxygen-poor conditions. We focus on sections that show the change from the Eocene open configuration of the Peri-Tethys to the enclosed setting of the Paratethys, and on the progressively closing marine connections of the Paratethys. We investigate Maikop equivalent sediments in southern Germany (North Alpine Foreland basin; NAFB), and the Maikop and underlying sediments at its type section (Belaya river, Russia). My thesis covers millions of years, and a vast geographic area, to better understand the timing and paleogeographic changes in the basin. This large-scale approach has enabled us to shed light on many different aspects that were important for the evolution from Peri-Tethys to Paratethys. We show that the connection of the Paratethys trough the NAFB closes at 33.15 Ma, millions of years earlier than the previously estimated 28 Ma. In Russia, we show that oxygen-depleted episodes already occurred in the Kuma formation (mi

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1445800475
Document Type :
Electronic Resource