Bulletin of the Mineral Research and Exploration (Aug 2020)
Neogene stratigraphy and regional correlation of the Çeşme Peninsula, Western Anatolia, Turkey
Abstract
This study aims to investigate the stratigraphy and regional correlation of terrestrial Neogene sediments and volcanics in the Çeşme Peninsula. Neogene deposition is represented by two main sedimentary successions separated from each other by an angular unconformity. The lacustrine dominated Çeşme group characterized the Lower-Middle Miocene deposition is formed by Şifne, Ovacık and Çiftlik formations. The felsic pyroclastics (Alaçatı pyroclastics), which are the early products of the Armağandağı volcanism, laterally associated with the Çeşme group deposition, deposited on the Şifne formation and interrupted the lacustrine sedimentation. The lacustrine sedimentation continued uninterruptedly with Ovacık and Çiftlik formations after the deposition of pyroclastics, which terminated the sedimentation of the Şifne formation. The calc-alkaline Armağandağı volcanism is composed of felsic pyroclastics, andesitic volcaniclastics (Reisdere volcaniclastics) and lavas (Zeytineli lava) respectively from bottom to top. The Late Miocene-Early (?) Pliocene Kaştepe group, which covers all these units with angular unconformity, is represented by a succession, which grades from alluvial fan (Karagöz formation) up to lacustrine deposits (İnlice formation).
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