Geologija (Jun 2002)

Miocene to Quaternary deformation, stratigraphy and paleogeography in Northeastern Slovenia and Southwestern Hungary

  • Laszlo Fodor,
  • Bogoljub Jelen,
  • Emo Marton,
  • Helena Rifelj,
  • Marijan Kraljić,
  • Renata Kervić,
  • Peter Marton,
  • Balazs Koroknai,
  • Maria Baldi-Beke

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 45, no. 1
pp. 103 – 114

Abstract

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The Mura-Zala basin was formed due to ENE-WSW trending crustal extension in the late early and middle Miocene (19 – 11 Ma). Marine sedimentation occurred in several more or less confined depressions (half grabens), then in a unified basin. The rifting phasewas probably connected to uplift and brittle-ductile deformation of metamorphic basement at the eastern part of the Pohorje and Kozjak hills. During the late Miocene thermal subsidence, deltaic to fluvial sediments were deposited.After sedimentation, the southernmost Haloze-Budafa sub-basin was inverted. Mapscale folds, reverse and strike-slip faults were originated by NNW-SSE compression during the latest Miocene(?)–Pliocene. After this folding, Karpatian sediments of theHaloze acquired magnetization. During the late(?)Pliocene to Quaternary(?), the whole Mura-Zala basin, including the folded Haloze, suffered 30° counterclockwise rotation as a relatively rigid block. This rotation affected a wider area from Slovenia to western Hungary and northern Croatia.

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