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https://doi.org/10.4154/gc.2020.12

Correlation of upper Miocene–Pliocene Lake Pannon deposits across the Drava Basin, Croatia and Hungary

Krisztina Sebe orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-4647-2199 ; University of Pécs, Department of Geology and Meteorology
Marijan Kovačić ; Faculty of Science, Department of Geology, University of Zagreb, Croatia
Imre Magyar ; MOL Hungarian Oil and Gas Plc., Budapest, Hungary
Krešimir Krizmanić ; INA -Oil Company, Plc., Zagreb, Croatia
Marko Špelić ; Croatian Geological Survey, Zagreb, Croatia
Dijana Bigunac ; INA -Oil Company, Plc., Zagreb, Croatia
Mária Sütő-Szentai ; retired
Ádám Kovács orcid id orcid.org/0000-0003-1542-2401 ; Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary
Andrea Szuromi-Korecz ; MOL Hungarian Oil and Gas Plc., Budapest, Hungary
Koraljka Bakrač orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-2520-411X ; Croatian Geological Survey, Zagreb, Croatia
Valentina Hajek-Tadesse orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-3396-7897 ; Croatian Geological Survey, Zagreb, Croatia
Tamara Troskot-Čorbić orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-0474-4985 ; INA -Oil Company, Plc., Zagreb, Croatia
Orsolya Sztanó orcid id orcid.org/0000-0003-0786-3653 ; Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary


Puni tekst: engleski PDF 6.408 Kb

str. 177-195

preuzimanja: 855

citiraj


Sažetak

Upper Miocene to Pliocene (Pannonian) sediments of the Pannonian Basin System accumulated in the brackish Lake Pannon and the fluvial feeder systems, between 11.6-2.6 Ma. Their stratigraphic subdivision has been problematic for a long time due to the laterally prograding architecture of the basin fill and the historically independently evolving stratigraphic schemes of the neighbouring countries. We correlated the lithostratigraphic units of the Lake Pannon deposits between Hungary and Croatia in the Drava Basin, using lithological, sedimentological and palaeontological data from boreholes and outcrops, and seismic correlation. The Croatica and Medvedski breg formations in Croatia correspond to the Endrőd Fm. in Hungary, comprising shallow to deep water, open lacustrine, calcareous to argillaceous marls. The Andraševec fm. in Croatia corresponds to the Szolnok and Algyő Fms. in Hungary, consisting of sandstones and siltstones of turbidite systems and of clay marls deposited on the shelf-break slope. The Nova Gradiška fm. in Croatia is an equivalent of the Újfalu Fm. in Hungary, built up of a variety of lithologies, including sand, silt, clay and huminitic clay, deposited in deltaic environments. The Pluska fm. in Croatia corresponds to the Zagyva Fm. in Hungary, consisting of variegated clays, silts, sands and lignites, deposited in alluvial and fluvial environments. Coarse-grained (sand, gravel) basal layers are assigned to the Kálla and Békés Fms. and the Sveti Matej member of the Croatica fm. Coarse-grained intercalations within the deep-water marls belong to the Dorozsma Member of the Endrőd Fm. in Hungary, and to the Bačun member of the Medvedski breg fm. in Croatia. Sediment transport and lateral accretion of the shelf edge in the Drava Basin took place from the N, NW, and W, to the S, SE, and E, respectively. According to the biostratigraphic and chronostratigraphic analyses, the oldest shelf-break slopes in the Mura Basin are more than 8 Ma old, whereas the youngest ones in the southeasternmost part of the Drava Basin may be Pliocene in age (younger than 5.3 Ma). Thus, the 180 km long and at least 700 m deep Drava Basin was transformed into a fluvial plain during the last 3.5 million years of the Miocene.

Ključne riječi

stratigraphy; correlation; Upper Miocene; Pannonian; Drava Basin

Hrčak ID:

246372

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/246372

Datum izdavanja:

26.10.2020.

Posjeta: 1.992 *