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The Danube River inception: Evidence for a 4 Ma continental‐scale river born from segmented ParaTethys basins
Author(s) -
Olariu Cornel,
Krezsek Csaba,
Jipa Dan C.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
terra nova
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.353
H-Index - 89
eISSN - 1365-3121
pISSN - 0954-4879
DOI - 10.1111/ter.12308
Subject(s) - geology , structural basin , sedimentary depositional environment , drainage basin , palaeogeography , paleontology , sedimentary basin , continental shelf , sedimentary rock , river mouth , sediment , geomorphology , oceanography , tectonics , volcanism , geography , cartography
Before reaching the Black Sea, the Danube River passes through a string of Para‐Tethyan (Vienna, Pannonian and western and eastern Dacian) basins. The key question is, when and how did the Danube River become a continental‐scale river with a drainage similar to present? New data presented here show that the Late Miocene deepwater strata in the Black Sea have a significant sediment source and depositional style change at about 4 Ma. However, the presence of active Miocene basins within the Danube catchment raises questions about the timing of Danube River inception and whether the upstream palaeogeography would have allowed or disallowed delivery of large sediment volumes to the deepwater Black Sea. Stratigraphic analyses in the Pannonian and Dacian basins reveal a phase of coeval sedimentary fill of the basins along the Danube at about 4 Ma. This multi‐basin observation points to a concurrent basin‐fill model rather than the basin fill‐and‐spill or Messinian‐type lowstand models previously proposed for Danube inception.

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