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dc.contributor.authorKandemir, Ö. and Akbayram, K. and Çobankaya, M. and Kanar, F. and Pehlivan, Ş. and Tok, T. and Hakyemez, A. and Ekmekçi, E. and Danaci, F. and Temiz, U.
dc.date.accessioned2021-04-08T12:07:10Z
dc.date.available2021-04-08T12:07:10Z
dc.date.issued2019
dc.identifier10.1130/B31913.1
dc.identifier.issn00167606
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85070866310&doi=10.1130%2fB31913.1&partnerID=40&md5=8804f1881e555ec960452c7e88c92297
dc.identifier.urihttp://acikerisim.bingol.edu.tr/handle/20.500.12898/4229
dc.description.abstractThe Eastern Pontide Arc, a major fossil submarine arc of the world, was formed by northward subduction of the northern Neo-Tethys lithosphere under the Eurasian margin. The arc's volcano-sedimentary sequence and its cover contain abundant fossils. Our new systematical paleontological and structural data suggest the Late Cretaceous arc volcanism was initiated at early-middle Turonian and continued uninterruptedly until the end of the early Maastrichtian, in the northern part of the Eastern Pontides. We measured ~5500-m-thick arc deposits, suggesting a deposition rate of ~220 m Ma-1 in ~25 m.y. We have also defined four different chemical volcanic episodes: (1) an early-middle Turonian-Santonian mafic-intermediate episode, (2) a Santonian acidic episode; when the main volcanic centers were formed as huge acidic domes-calderas comprising the volcanogenic massive sulfide ores, (3) a late Santonian-late Campanian mafic-intermediate episode, and (4) a late Campanian-early Maastrichtian acidic episode. The volcaniclastic rocks were deposited in a deepwater extensional basin until the late Campanian. Between late Campanian and early Maastrichtian, intra-arc extension resulted in opening of back-arc in the north, while the southern part of the arc remained active and uplifted. The back-arc basin was most probably connected to the Eastern Black Sea Basin. In the back-arc basin, early Maastrichtian volcano-sedimentary arc sequence was transitionally overlain by pelagic sediments until late Danian suggesting continuous deep-marine conditions. However, the subsidence of the uplifted-arc-region did not occur until late Maastrichtian. We have documented a Selandian-early Thanetian (57-60 Ma) regional hiatus defining the closure age of the Izmir-Ankara-Erzincan Ocean along the Eastern Pontides. Between late Thanetian and late Lutetian synorogenic turbidites and postcollisional volcanics were deposited. The Eastern Pontide fold-and-thrust belt started to form at early Eocene (ca. 55 Ma) and thrusting continued in the post-Lutetian times. © 2019 Geological Society of America.
dc.language.isoEnglish
dc.sourceBulletin of the Geological Society of America
dc.titleFrom arc evolution to arc-continent collision: Late Cretaceous-middle Eocene geology of the Eastern Pontides, northeastern Turkey


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