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Subsidence analysis and tectonic evolution of the external Carpathian–Moesian Platform region during Neogene times L. Matenco a, * , G. Bertotti b , S. Cloetingh b , C. Dinu a a Faculty of Geology and Geophysics, University of Bucharest, 6 Traian Vuia str. sect. 1, RO-70139 Bucharest-1, Romania b Department of Earth Sciences, Vrije Universiteit, De Boelelaan 1085, 1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands Received 20 September 1999; received in revised form 13 July 2000; accepted 19 July 2002 Abstract The Miocene – Pliocene subsidence of the tectonic platforms in the Romanian Carpathians foreland is analysed using standard 1D backstripping techniques for individual wells, combined in two regional sections and six contour maps. The subsidence patterns were integrated together with previous paleostress and kinematic studies, in order to derive the Tertiary kinematics of the buried faults in the Carpathians lower plate. The study revealed accelerated subsidence during the Early Miocene in the western part of the Moesian Platform/Getic Depression, in direct relationship with the opening of a WSW – ENE trending extensional basin. The largest subsidence recorded in the front of the Carpathians took place during the Late Miocene, due to final E-ward emplacement of the thrust sheets. The Late Miocene subsidence showed anomalous high values between the Intramoesian and Trotus faults as a result of the orogenic collision with the East-European Platform northward and acceleration of the subduction process in the SE Carpathians corner. Further Pliocene subsidence continued only in the latter region, the depocenter being shifted southward near the junction with the South Carpathians foreland. D 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. Keywords: Carpathians; Foredeep basins; Flexure; Romania 1. Introduction The Romanian Carpathians represent a large-scale arcuate belt formed as a response to the Triassic to Tertiary evolution of two continental blocks, the Median Dacides (Sandulescu, 1984, 1988), or Rho- dopian fragment (Burchfiel, 1976) to the west and south, and the East-European/Scythian/Moesian Plat- forms to the east and north (Sandulescu, 1984; San- dulescu and Visarion, 1988; Visarion et al., 1988) (Fig. 1). The Carpathians consist of thick- and thin- skinned nappe piles (de)formed by thrusting and dextral transpression during Middle Cretaceous to Pliocene times (e.g., Sandulescu, 1984, 1988; Ratsch- bacher et al., 1993; Csontos, 1995; Linzer et al., 1998; Zweigel et al., 1998 and references therein). The nappes are made of crystalline rocks and Paleozoic to Tertiary sediments, partly deposited in a Triassic to Early Cretaceous extensional basin. Shorter periods of orogen-parallel extension (e.g., Schmid et al., 1998; Rabagia and Matenco, 1999; Matenco and Schmid, 1999) interrupted the overall shortening. 0037-0738/02/$ - see front matter D 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. PII:S0037-0738(02)00283-X * Corresponding author. Fax: +40-1-211-7390. E-mail address: [email protected] (L. Matenco). www.elsevier.com/locate/sedgeo Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 71 – 94
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  • Subsidence analysis and tectonic evolution of the external

    CarpathianMoesian Platform region during Neogene times

    L. Matenco a,*, G. Bertotti b, S. Cloetingh b, C. Dinu a

    aFaculty of Geology and Geophysics, University of Bucharest, 6 Traian Vuia str. sect. 1, RO-70139 Bucharest-1, RomaniabDepartment of Earth Sciences, Vrije Universiteit, De Boelelaan 1085, 1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands

    Received 20 September 1999; received in revised form 13 July 2000; accepted 19 July 2002

    Abstract

    The MiocenePliocene subsidence of the tectonic platforms in the Romanian Carpathians foreland is analysed using

    standard 1D backstripping techniques for individual wells, combined in two regional sections and six contour maps. The

    subsidence patterns were integrated together with previous paleostress and kinematic studies, in order to derive the Tertiary

    kinematics of the buried faults in the Carpathians lower plate. The study revealed accelerated subsidence during the Early

    Miocene in the western part of the Moesian Platform/Getic Depression, in direct relationship with the opening of a WSWENE

    trending extensional basin. The largest subsidence recorded in the front of the Carpathians took place during the Late Miocene,

    due to final E-ward emplacement of the thrust sheets. The Late Miocene subsidence showed anomalous high values between the

    Intramoesian and Trotus faults as a result of the orogenic collision with the East-European Platform northward and acceleration

    of the subduction process in the SE Carpathians corner. Further Pliocene subsidence continued only in the latter region, the

    depocenter being shifted southward near the junction with the South Carpathians foreland.

    D 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

    Keywords: Carpathians; Foredeep basins; Flexure; Romania

    1. Introduction

    The Romanian Carpathians represent a large-scale

    arcuate belt formed as a response to the Triassic to

    Tertiary evolution of two continental blocks, the

    Median Dacides (Sandulescu, 1984, 1988), or Rho-

    dopian fragment (Burchfiel, 1976) to the west and

    south, and the East-European/Scythian/Moesian Plat-

    forms to the east and north (Sandulescu, 1984; San-

    dulescu and Visarion, 1988; Visarion et al., 1988)

    (Fig. 1). The Carpathians consist of thick- and thin-

    skinned nappe piles (de)formed by thrusting and

    dextral transpression during Middle Cretaceous to

    Pliocene times (e.g., Sandulescu, 1984, 1988; Ratsch-

    bacher et al., 1993; Csontos, 1995; Linzer et al., 1998;

    Zweigel et al., 1998 and references therein). The

    nappes are made of crystalline rocks and Paleozoic

    to Tertiary sediments, partly deposited in a Triassic to

    Early Cretaceous extensional basin. Shorter periods of

    orogen-parallel extension (e.g., Schmid et al., 1998;

    Rabagia and Matenco, 1999; Matenco and Schmid,

    1999) interrupted the overall shortening.

    0037-0738/02/$ - see front matter D 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

    PII: S0037 -0738 (02 )00283 -X

    * Corresponding author. Fax: +40-1-211-7390.

    E-mail address: [email protected] (L. Matenco).

    www.elsevier.com/locate/sedgeo

    Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 7194

  • The CarpathiansPannonian structural assemblage

    provides a natural laboratory for the study of highly

    complicated polydeformed terranes, resulting from the

    interaction between thrusting units (mainly the inter-

    nal and median Dacides) and highly arcuate shape of

    the foreland. Large-scale rotations (e.g., Patrascu et

    al., 1990, 1992, 1994) and extension in the Pannonian

    Basin (e.g., Horvath, 1993) coeval with contraction

    Fig. 1. Tectonic map of the external part of the Romanian Carpathians and of major boundary faults in the foreland platforms. Faults in the thin-

    skinned belt and adjacent platforms are defined according to surface maps (1:200,000, 1:50,000), seismic exploration studies, and from Matenco

    (1997) and Rabagia and Matenco (1999). Major boundary faults in the platforms are defined according to Sandulescu and Visarion (1988) and

    Visarion et al. (1988). TFTrotus Fault, PCFPeceneaga-Camena Fault, COFCapidava-Ovidiu Fault, IMFIntramoesian Fault.

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 719472

  • and transcurrent movements at the exterior of the

    Carpathians are some of the features associated with

    such complex interactions.

    The Tertiary evolution of the Romanian Carpathi-

    ans and adjacent foreland is characterised by temporal

    changes in the stress and strain fields. This is not only

    shown by recently acquired structural data, but it is

    also a consequence of the arcuate shape of the belt.

    Models assuming a roughly contemporaneous em-

    placement of thrust sheets in the various segments of

    the Carpathians (e.g., Sandulescu, 1984, 1988) are in-

    compatible with the absence of structures able to ac-

    commodate the coeval large orogen-parallel extension

    required (e.g., Morley, 1996; Zweigel et al., 1998).

    Other models, envisaging the Carpathians as mainly

    due to E-ward translation of the Intra-Carpathians units

    (Royden, 1988; Ellouz and Roca, 1994), are at odds

    with the abovementioned structural data and with the

    absence of large-scale transcurrent movements within

    the South Carpathians (e.g., Rabagia and Fulop, 1994).

    Models taking into account quantitative analysis of the

    stress field and associated deformation structures

    within the Romanian Carpathians, as well as the

    integration with the regional plate-tectonic scenarios,

    are still to be developed. As a result, important differ-

    ences exist between the tectonic models, mainly con-

    cerning the timing and especially the directions of

    motions through time.

    In the foreland, major uncertainties still exist in

    establishing the kinematics and (re)activation of

    regional faults penetrating the basement (e.g., Intra-

    moesian, Peceneaga-Camena, Trotus, Bistrita faults,

    Figs. 1 and 2) during the Tertiary. Whether or not

    these faults have influenced the lateral variations in

    the thin-skinned thrusting kinematics is still to be

    pursued. Important sedimentary basins developed dur-

    ing the Tertiary on the foreland platforms, which are

    often referred to as foredeeps. However, the kine-

    matics of subsidence has rarely been documented. To

    fill this gap, we analysed a large number of subsurface

    data (wells, geological profiles and seismic interpre-

    tations) distributed in all the units to the E and S-ward

    of the Carpathian thrust front and derived the Tertiary

    (mostly Miocene and Pliocene) subsidence curves of

    the foreland platforms. This subsidence evolution is

    then compared with the Tertiary structural evolution

    of the Carpathians units to correlate kinematics and

    deformation patterns.

    2. Structure of the autochthonous platforms

    The undeformed foreland of the Carpathians is

    composed of the amalgamation of three major units

    with different geometries and characteristics. They all

    represent cratonic continental platforms (senso Twiss

    and Moores, 1992) with Precambrian crystalline rocks

    and a PaleozoicMesozoic sedimentary cover over-

    lain by Tertiary sediments belonging both to the

    Carpathians foredeep basin and to the flat-lying plat-

    form successions. The separation between the two

    types of Tertiary sediments is formed by the flexural

    bulge of the Carpathians lower plate (e.g., Dumitrescu

    and Sandulescu, 1970) and is thus somehow arbitrary.

    For simplicity, our further discussion will include

    these units in the generic term of foreland plat-

    forms.

    According to Sandulescu and Visarion (1988) and

    Visarion et al. (1988), the autochthonous platforms in

    the foreland of the Romanian Carpathians are com-

    posed of two, internally complex, relatively stable

    areas, the East-European/Scythian and the Moesian

    Platforms, separated by the North Dobrogean oro-

    genic zone (Fig. 2).

    The platform domains are overthrusted by the thin-

    skinned units of the Outer Romanian Carpathians. In

    the East Carpathians, the most external thrusted units,

    i.e. the Tarcau, Marginal Folds and Subcarpathian

    units (Fig. 1), come in contact and influenced the

    deformation patterns of the platforms. These thin-

    skinned units contain clastic sediments (Fig. 3),

    deposited on a thinned continental crust (Sandulescu,

    1988) and thrusted during Middle Miocene (Late

    BurdigalianBadenian) and Late Miocene (Sarma-

    tian Early Meotian) tectonic events (Matenco,

    1997; Fig. 3). In the frontal part of the South Carpa-

    thians, only the deformed foredeep (Getic Depression)

    is in direct contact with the Moesian Platform (Fig. 1).

    The Tertiary evolution of the Getic DepressionMoe-

    sian Platform is characterised by major changes in

    deformation patterns (Fig. 4); details are discussed

    below.

    2.1. East-European and Scythian Platforms

    The East-European and Scythian Platforms are two

    crustal blocks delimited towards the south by the

    Trotus Fault and towards the W by the Campulung-

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 7194 73

  • L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 719474

  • Bicaz Fault (Sandulescu and Visarion, 1988) (Fig. 2).

    The geological and mechanical characteristics of these

    crustal blocks influenced the thin-skinned nappe pile

    thrusting patterns and therefore defined the first major

    foreland domain (Matenco, 1997).

    The deep structure of the East-European/Scythian

    Platforms has been documented by geophysical

    soundings. Deep reflection profiles show an overall

    thickness of 10 km for the sedimentary cover, and

    Conrad and Moho discontinuities being located at 20

    and 40 km, respectively (Raileanu et al., 1994), while

    seismological data show a crustal thickness of 43 km

    (Enescu et al., 1988, 1992). West of the Solca Fault, in

    the Scythian Platform, a thinning to 35 km has been

    documented by magnetotelluric studies (Visarion et

    al., 1988). The Solca Fault thus represents the eastern

    limit of the Trans-European Suture Zone (former

    TornquistTeissere lineament) (e.g., Botezatu and

    Calota, 1983; Guterch et al., 1986), which in the

    Romanian foreland coincides with the Scythian Plat-

    form and the North-Dobrogean orogen (Pinna et al.,

    1991).

    The East-European Platform extends underneath

    the frontal part of the Romanian East Carpathians,

    north of the Bistrita and west of the Solca faults (Fig.

    2). The East-European Platform is internally subdi-

    vided by the NNWSSE trending Siret Fault. The

    eastern block has metamorphic basement elements

    very similar to those of the Ukrainian Massif, as

    documented by few deep wells and typical magnetic

    anomalies (Airinei et al., 1966). The western block

    (Radauti-Pascani, after Sandulescu and Visarion,

    1988), located between the Siret and Solca faults,

    narrows towards the south and disappears south of

    Piatra Neamt (Fig. 2). While Paleozoic rocks in few

    deep wells are similar to those of the eastern block,

    the nature of the basement is unknown (Airinei et al.,

    1966).

    The thickness of the sedimentary cover of the East-

    European Platform is comprised between 6 and 12 km

    near the main thrust front (Raileanu et al., 1994),

    decreasing toward the east. Three major sedimentation

    cycles separated by major unconformities are defined

    (Ionesi, 1989): Paleozoic (Upper VendianDevonian),

    MesozoicPaleogene (CretaceousMiddle Eocene)

    and Tertiary (Upper BadenianLower Pliocene). This

    undeformed Tertiary cover has a thickness of 39 km

    near the frontal nappe contact, slightly decreasing

    towards the east.

    The Scythian Platform is a NWSE to WE

    oriented continental block, extending between the

    Bistrita and Trotus faults (Fig. 2). It is clearly docu-

    mented south of the East-European Platform in the

    Brlad Depression. Towards the W and NW, the

    Scythian Platform is continuous with the basement

    block between Solca and Campulung-Bicaz faults

    (Sandulescu and Visarion, 1988). Here, a similar type

    of Scythian basement has been documented by mag-

    netic anomalies and deep wells as in the Brlad

    Depression (Sandulescu and Visarion, 1988). The

    internal structure of the Scythian Platform is less well

    known than that of the East-European Platform, due to

    thicker Tertiary sediments in the Brlad Depression

    and to underthrusting below the East Carpathians

    nappe pile. However, three major sedimentation

    cycles have been defined (Ionesi, 1989): Upper Pale-

    ozoicLower Mesozoic (PermianLower Triassic),

    MesozoicPaleogene (JurassicEocene) and Tertiary

    (Upper BadenianRomanian), sediments of the last

    period partly belonging to the undeformed foredeep.

    Mesozoic and Tertiary deformations occur within

    the East-European/Scythian Platforms, and consist of

    Fig. 2. (A) Simplified structural map of the autochthonous units in the frontal part of the Romanian Carpathians (compiled after Sandulescu and

    Visarion, 1988; Visarion et al., 1988; Dicea, 1995, 1996) and contour map of the pre-Miocene basement of the foreland platforms. The contour

    map is made through direct interpolation of the pre-Miocene basement from the present study data. Fault offsets have been neglected. Note the

    high depth values of the basement in the Focsani Depression and the apparent dextral offset along the Intramoesian Fault and sinistral offset

    along the Trotus Fault. (B) Contour map of the pre-Miocene (basement) crustal thickness obtained by subtracting the depth of pre-Miocene

    basement of the foreland platform (A) from the present-day crust thickness map of Romania (Radulescu, 1988). The contour map is made

    through direct interpolation of values. Fault offsets are neglected. Note the strong differences in the crust thickness between the East-European/

    Scythian platforms +North Dobrogean orogen and the much thinner Moesian platform. CBFCampulung-Bicaz Fault, ScFSolca Fault,

    SiFSiret Fault, VFVaslui Fault, BFBistrita Fault, TFTrotus Fault, PCFPeceneaga-Camena Fault, COFCapidava-Ovidiu Fault,

    IMFIntramoesian Fault, JFJiu Fault, MFMotru Fault, CFCerna Fault, TkFnorthern extension of Timok Fault, CTFCalimanesti-Tg. Jiu Fault.

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 7194 75

  • two types of faults. NWSE trending normal faults

    account for a progressive deepening of the autoch-

    thonous units beneath the flysch nappes (Fig. 2). One

    good example is provided by Straja-Gura Humorului

    Fault (Fig. 5(a)A). This inherited fault has an offset of

    ca. 1 km and forms the external boundary of the

    Marginal Folds nappe (Sandulescu, 1984; Sandulescu

    and Visarion, 1988; Dicea, 1995). Seismic surveys

    Fig. 3. Time correlation table, stratigraphic column and tectonic evolution scheme for the Tarcau, Marginal and Subcarpathian units (modified

    after Sandulescu et al., 1981). Correlation between Odin (1994) and the Central and Eastern Paratethys for the Oligocene and Miocene ages after

    Rogl (1996) and M. Marunteanu (unpublished data). Note the differences in the MiocenePliocene and especially the MiocenePliocene

    boundary. A, B and C represent the internal, intermediate and external sedimentary facies, respectively, in the displayed units.

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 719476

  • Fig. 4. Foredeep stratigraphic correlation and tectonic evolution scheme of the South Carpathians for the Uppermost CretaceousTertiary with

    the structural deformation features and correlation with the tectonic episodes defined by Matenco et al. (1997a), Schmid et al. (1998) and

    Rabagia and Matenco (1999) (correlation of TethysParathetys similar to Fig. 3).

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 7194 77

  • L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 719478

  • have also imaged large NESW to EW trending

    crosscutting faults (Fig. 2) associated with a progres-

    sively deeper basement towards the south. Beneath

    the flysch nappes, the top of the sedimentary cover

    (i.e., the Badenian anhydrite horizon visible in the

    seismic studies) is deepening southward, from an

    average of 1500 m in the north to 5000 m in the

    region of Bistrita Valley, and further to 800010,000

    m southward (Dicea, 1995).

    West of the Campulung-Bicaz Fault, magneto-

    telluric soundings have imaged a clear thickening

    of the PaleozoicMesozoic sediments in the lower

    plate. The deformed Paleozoic basement would then

    lie at 910 km depth (Sandulescu and Visarion,

    1988), accounting for the southern extent of the Mie-

    chow Depression beneath the thin-skinned thrust belt

    (Fig. 2).

    2.2. Moesian Platform

    The Moesian Platform represents a Precambrian

    block incorporated in the Epihercynian European

    platforms (Sandulescu, 1984). The Moesian Platform

    (Fig. 2) extends S and SW of the Trotus and Pece-

    neaga-Camena faults, and it is composed by two main

    domains, the Dobrogean and Valachian parts

    separated by the crustal scale Intramoesian Fault

    (Visarion et al., 1988). Along the Peceneaga-Camena

    Fault, the Dobrogean block was displaced upward and

    dextrally (e.g., Radulescu et al., 1976; Visarion et al.,

    1988). Deep refraction seismic profiles in the Dobro-

    gean domain show crustal thicknesses around 3540

    km (Radulescu, 1988) compatible with the seismo-

    logical data of f 34 km (Enescu et al., 1992). TheVrancea (SE bend) area displays anomalous values of

    4047 km (Radulescu et al., 1976; Cornea et al.,

    1981; Enescu et al., 1992; Raileanu et al., 1994). The

    Capidava-Ovidiu Fault (Fig. 2) subdivides the Dobro-

    gean zone in two parts, characterised by different

    basements and pre-Tertiary sedimentary covers, the

    Central Dobrogea unit to the north and the South

    Dobrogea unit to the south. According to Visarion et

    al. (1988), the Central Dobrogea unit is uplifted with

    respect to the South Dobrogea along Capidava-Ovidiu

    Fault, which seems to display also a right-lateral

    displacement (e.g., Radulescu et al., 1976). The

    Dobrogean basement generally dips towards the

    WNW underneath the Carpathians (e.g., Airinei,

    1958), with significant thinning of the basement,

    and pre-Tertiary cover below the Focsani Depression

    (Fig. 2(B)).

    The Intramoesian Fault separates the Dobrogean

    and Valachian parts of the Moesian Platform and

    represents a deep crustal fracture extending northward

    of the Moesian Platform underneath the Getic Nappe

    (Figs. 1 and 2(A)) (Sandulescu, 1984; Visarion et al.,

    1988). It is site of a large number of shallow to deep

    earthquakes (Radulescu et al., 1976; Cornea and

    Polonic, 1979). Recent seismic studies (Matenco,

    1997) suggest 1015 km of right-lateral movement

    during the Late Miocene.

    South and west of the Intramoesian Fault, the

    Moesian Platform is composed of two different seg-

    ments (Visarion et al., 1988), i.e. the Valachian and

    Danubian domains, bounded by the crustal-scale

    Calimanes ti-Tg. Jiu Fault (Fig. 2). This fault repre-sents a NE prolongation of the Timok Fault (Fig. 2)

    and separates, at the Paleozoic level, platform-type

    sedimentary deposits in the south, from the deformed

    and sometimes metamorphosed deposits in the north

    (Visarion et al., 1988). In fact, the northern part of the

    Danubian domain represents an Alpine foreland

    coupling block, i.e. a lower plate block involved in

    thrusting, as commonly observed elsewhere in the

    Carpathians (e.g., Ziegler, 1990). This block was

    detached from Moesia during Cretaceous contraction

    and is presently incorporated in the Danubian thrust

    sheets of the South Carpathians nappe pile (Berza and

    Fig. 5. (a) Seismically controlled geological profiles in the external thin-skinned units of the Romanian Carpathians. Location of profiles in Fig.

    6. Sections have no vertical exaggeration. Note, however, that the sections have different scales. (A) Geological profile in the northernmost part

    of the Romanian Carpathians. SGHF=Straja-Gura Humorului Fault (local name of Solca Fault, after Dicea, 1995) separates the East-European

    Platform to the east from the Scythian Platform to the west. (B) Geological profile along the Buzau valley (bending area). Note the frontal

    triangle zone, the large number of backthrusts and the large subsidence in the frontal Focsani Depression. (C) Geological profile along the

    Prahova valley (SW East Carpathians). Note the buried frontal thrust and the large number of Lower Burdigalian salt diapirs. (b) Seismically

    controlled geological cross-section in the western part of the Moesian Platform/Getic Depression (after Stefanescu and working group, 1988;

    Rabagia and Matenco, 1999). Note the large Early Burdigalian normal fault inverted by a Late Sarmatian flower structure. Location of profile in

    Fig. 6.

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 7194 79

  • Draganescu, 1988). In the Valachian domain, deep

    refraction seismic profiles show crustal thickness

    values around 3540 km (Radulescu, 1988), while

    seismological data show an average value of 34 km

    (Enescu et al., 1992). One of the most characteristic

    features of the Valachian domain is the presence of

    subvertical faults which define subsiding areas (for

    instance the Alexandria Depression) and intervening

    uplifted regions, where the basement can be observed

    close to surface (e.g., Craiova, Bals and Optasi

    uplifts). Faults are typically NS to NNWSSE and

    EW. A dextral sense of movement is suggested for

    the NNWSSE trending faults by seismically

    detected displacements of Miocene markers (Rabagia

    and Matenco, 1999).

    The sedimentary cover of the Moesian Platform is

    thickest in the Vrancea area (up to 18 km; Cornea et

    al., 1981) and thins to 810 km elsewhere. Sedi-

    ments are organised in four major successions (Ion-

    esi, 1989). The Upper Cambrian Westphalian

    succession is up to 6500 m thick and composed of

    a lower detritic (shales) group and an upper lime-

    stone group. It is unconformably followed by up to

    5000-m thick, predominantly clastic (shalessand-

    stones) PermianTriassic succession with Permian

    evaporitic and tuff levels, followed by thick Middle

    Triassic carbonate-evaporites. Younger deposits (up

    to 3000 m thick) are made up of a Jurassic detritic

    sequence (sandstones and shales) and Upper Jurassic

    to Upper Cretaceous mainly limestones, being fol-

    lowed by detritic Tertiary (Paleogene to Pliocene)

    sediments. The latter range in thickness between 2

    and 7 km near the Carpathians sole thrust and

    slightly thinning towards the foreland. Striking thick-

    nesses of 9 km Neogene sediments are observed in

    the Focsani Depression.

    2.3. North Dobrogea orogen

    The North Dobrogea zone, located between the

    Scythian and Moesian Platforms, is composed of a

    complex polydeformed Hercynian basement and a

    TriassicCretaceous sedimentary cover, unequally

    developed (e.g., Ionesi, 1989 and references therein).

    West of the Danube, the basement and Mesozoic

    sediments are covered by a thick succession of Ter-

    tiary deposits, forming the pre-Dobrogean Depression

    (Fig. 2).

    Large geometrical and mechanical differences

    exist among the foreland units. The pre-Miocene

    crustal thickness map (Fig. 2(B)) indicates steep

    changes along the Peceneaga-Camena Fault and the

    Trotus Fault, separating the East-European/Scythian

    Platforms and the North Dobrogean orogen from the

    much thinner Moesian platform. As flexural model-

    ling studies (e.g., Matenco et al., 1997b) have

    demonstrated similar differences in the mechanical

    characteristics across the Trotus Fault (larger EET

    values to the north), one has to look for correlative

    changes in the thin-skinned thrust belt kinematics.

    The previously suggested sinistral offset along the

    Peceneaga-Camena Fault (e.g., Girbacea and Frisch,

    1998; Linzer et al., 1998) is not supported by

    seismic studies, due to the absence of this fault

    northward and to the clear truncation along the

    Trotus Fault.

    3. Subsidence evolution of the Romanian foreland

    platforms on the basis of burial history restoration

    The subsidence of the Romanian foreland was

    reconstructed for all the three major platform units

    composing the frontal part of the Carpathians (East-

    European, Scythian and Moesian) as well as for the

    pre-Dobrogean Depression (the buried prolongation

    of the North-Dobrogean orogen) (Fig. 2(A), col-

    oured areas). More specifically, data were used from

    the area between the east Romanian border and the

    frontal thrust of the East Carpathians, and from the

    South Romanian border to the northern contact of

    the sediments with the allochthonous units of the

    South Carpathians. The Miocene sediments of the

    eastern part of the Getic Depression are allochtho-

    nous and, therefore, were not used for subsidence

    analysis.

    In most cases, data used for subsidence analysis

    come from deep wells (Fig. 6). In areas with few or

    no wells, synthetic stratigraphic columns were

    derived from well-controlled seismic profiles and

    from their geological interpretation. In the western

    part of the Getic Depression and the Valachian

    Moesian Platform (Fig. 6), we used data from 50

    deep wells (Figs. 7 and 8), one seismically controlled

    geological profile (Fig. 5(b)) and four regional pro-

    files controlled from wells (profiles A18, A20, A21,

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 719480

  • A22; Stefanescu and working group, 1988). In the

    frontal part of the East Carpathians (Fig. 6), subsidence

    analysis took into account 40 deep wells, 16 seismi-

    cally controlled geological profiles (eastern part of

    profiles 116; Matenco, 1997) placed nearby the

    frontal Pericarpathian sole thrust, and five regional

    profiles controlled from wells (profiles A912 and

    A14; Stefanescu and working group, 1988). Less de-

    tail has been obtained for the SE-most part of the

    studied area, near Danube, where only three deep wells

    could be used.

    3.1. Method

    Standard 1D backstripping techniques (Steckler

    and Watts, 1978; Watts et al., 1982) were employed

    to reconstruct the vertical evolution of the basement

    during Miocene and Pliocene times. The compaction

    correction was made according to porosity versus

    depth relations (e.g., Sclater and Christie, 1980). A

    porosity profile has been computed for each major

    tectonic unit from well electrical logs (unpublished

    data of R.A. Petrom). We have assumed an exponen-

    Fig. 6. Location of data used for basement subsidence reconstructions. Real wells mean that depth of various stratigraphic limits and porosities

    have been derived from real well logs. Real depth wells mean that basement subsidence has been calculated (Fig. 7) for the entire stratigraphic

    column, for sediments as old as Silurian. Pseudo-wells mean that depth of various stratigraphic limits has been collected from geological

    interpretations. Circles are seismically controlled profiles of Matenco (1997); triangles are interpretations of Stefanescu and working group

    (1988) and unpublished data of Petrom, R.A. Two-dimension reconstructions 2D A and B represent geological profiles in Fig. 5(b) and A14

    (Stefanescu and working group, 1988). S-A to S-D represent locations of geological interpretations in Fig. 5.

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 7194 81

  • tial compaction law for six standard lithological types

    (sandstone, siltstone, clay, limestone, salt and anhy-

    drite), and we have averaged the compaction depend-

    encies with the real log porosity.

    Paleobathymetries have always been taken as zero,

    due to absence of a consistent data set. In any case, the

    introduced error is not likely to be large since no

    deepwater formations have been described so far in

    the studied area. Sea level corrections took into

    account tectonic/eustatic base level variation curves

    (senso Prosser, 1993) of Rabagia and Matenco (1999)

    for the Getic DepressionValachian Moesian Plat-

    form and general Haq curves for the East-European/

    Scythian Platform (Haq et al., 1987). The latter values

    may introduce a certain degree of error for the

    computed subsidence values, but there seem to be a

    rough correlation with the more precise data of the

    first author.

    Our subsidence analysis concerns Miocene and

    younger sediments and considers older rocks as

    basement. This is justified by the observation that

    the Paleogene of the foreland platforms is largely

    characterised by nondeposition or sediment erosion

    (with exceptions in the Moesian Platform and Getic

    Depression). In order to provide a general image of

    the Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Tertiary subsidence evo-

    lution of the Moesian platform, subsidence curves

    from 10 deep wells were calculated for the entire

    stratigraphic column, including sediments as old as

    the Silurian (Fig. 7). Mesozoic sea level changes were

    taken from the Haq curves, while no sea level changes

    have been considered for the Paleozoic.

    We have computed only basement subsidence

    curves. Tectonic subsidence curves were not calcu-

    lated, because they generally imply local isostatic

    compensation, which is incompatible with significant

    flexural strength of the Carpathian foreland (effective

    elastic thickness between 10 and 20 km; Matenco et

    al., 1997b).

    Quantitative 2D reconstructions have been built

    along two profiles derived from depth-converted,

    interpreted seismic lines calibrated with wells. Sub-

    Fig. 8. MiocenePliocene subsidence in the Getic DepressionMoesian Platform. (A) Basement subsidence curves in domains of Early

    Burdigalian extension. (B) Basement subsidence curves in the frontal part of the Getic Depression sole thrust where significant Sarmatian

    subsidence is observed. (C) Basement subsidence curves in the Late BurdigalianSarmatian piggyback basins. (D) Basement subsidence curve

    underlying the large Eocene subsidence. Note that the horizontal scale in the latter diagram is different from the previous ones.

    Fig. 7. PaleozoicTertiary basement subsidence based on 10 deep wells in the Getic DepressionMoesian Platform. Location in Fig. 6. (A)

    Central Moesian Platform, (B) the NW part of Getic Depression and (C) the eastern part of the Moesian Platform.

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 719482

  • L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 7194 83

  • sidence curves were constructed for synthetic wells

    read at constant 1-km interval along these profiles

    and assembled together into the 2D reconstructions

    (Fig. 10).

    From 1D and 2D reconstructions, we have built

    basement subsidence maps (Figs. 11 and 12), through

    direct interpolation between data, without taking into

    account possible intervening fault offsets.

    Fig. 9. MiocenePliocene subsidence in the frontal part of the East Carpathians. (A) Basement subsidence curves in the East-European Platform

    based on real wells. (B) Basement subsidence curves near the East Carpathians sole thrust (Matenco, 1997). (C) Basement subsidence curves on

    the flanks of the Focsani Depression based on real wells for the upper part of the stratigraphic column and depth-converted seismic lines for the

    lower part.

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 719484

  • 3.2. Results

    The record provided by the deep wells penetrating

    Mesozoic and older rocks is obviously incomplete but

    the curves we have obtained suggest a significant

    episode of subsidence during SilurianDevonian

    times (Fig. 7, wells B3 and C1) and during the

    Triassic (Fig. 7, wells A1, A3, B3 and C2) in the

    Moesian platform. Triassic subsidence is related to

    continental rifting along presently ENEWSW trend-

    ing normal faults (e.g., Alexandria Depression) (Raba-

    gia, unpublished data). Significant subsidence is

    observed also during the JurassicLower Cretaceous

    (Fig. 7, wells C1 and C3), probably in connection

    with extension in the Outer Dacidian Trough (e.g.,

    Sandulescu, 1988).

    Miocene to Pliocene subsidence is recorded by all

    curves obtained. The most apparent feature is the

    Sarmatian subsidence, which is practically ubiquitous

    in all curves (Figs. 79). Subsidence is contempora-

    neous with the large-scale Sarmatian thrusting and

    there should be, therefore, a genetic relation between

    the two phenomena. It is thus not surprising that

    Sarmatian subsidence values decrease from the frontal

    thrust towards the foreland.

    Relevant information is further derived by the

    analysis of subsidence curves in the various domains

    of the foreland. In the Getic DepressionMoesian

    Platform, one deep well (901 Ticleni, Fig. 8, curve

    D) suggests roughly 3000 m of basement subsidence

    (at a rate of 230 m/Ma) during the EarlyMiddle

    Eocene. This may be correlated with coeval large-

    scale extension and core-complex formation in the

    Danubian units of the neighbouring South Carpathi-

    ans (Schmid et al., 1998; Matenco and Schmid, 1999).

    Generalized subsidence (up to 3000 m in the basin

    depocenter, approximately 1100 m/Ma) affected the

    area already in the Early Miocene (Fig. 8(A)) in

    connection with the Lower Burdigalian extension

    which lead to the opening of ENEWSW trending

    basins (Matenco et al., 1997a; Rabagia and Matenco,

    1999). Basement subsidence decreased during the

    Late Burdigalian (Fig. 8(C)). At this time, the earlier

    extensional basin was inverted, and shortening along

    small-offset thrusts was propagating in a more exter-

    nal position. In the NW parts of the Getic Depression,

    subsidence continued until recent times, although at

    low rates.

    In the foreland units of the East Carpathians,

    subsidence is dominated by the Sarmatian tectonic

    event. East of the Carpathians frontal thrust, the

    Sarmatian basement subsidence has values in order

    of 10002000 m (5001000 m/Ma) for the East-

    European Platform (Fig. 9(A) and (B1)), 35004000

    m (17502000 m/Ma) for the Scythian Platform

    (Fig. 9(B2)) and high values of 30006000 m

    (15003000 m/Ma) for the northern part of the

    Moesian Platform, around the Focsani Depression

    area (Fig. 9(B2), (B3)). Further to the S and SW-

    ward, Sarmatian subsidence gradually decreases to

    20003000 m (10001500 m/Ma, Fig. 9(B4) and

    (B5)). PliocenePleistocene subsidence values of

    20003000 m (200300 m/Ma) are observed in

    the Focsani Depression (Fig. 9(B2) and (B3)) and

    reach 4 km (400 m/Ma) in the SW corner of the East

    Carpathians (Fig. 9(B4) and (B5)) in association with

    the Late Pliocene thrusting.

    By assembling 1D subsidence curves along a

    cross-section, we have obtained a 2D restoration of

    the basement subsidence in the western part of the

    Getic DepressionMoesian Platform (Fig. 10(A)).

    The section nicely shows Lower Burdigalian sub-

    sidence in the WNW-part of the profile associated

    with the opening of the extensional basin along a

    SWNE trending normal fault. The remaining of

    the section was practically stable. Generalized sub-

    sidence affected the areas crossed by the profile in

    the Badenian and, even more, in the Sarmatian. It is

    interesting to note that, with exception of the west-

    ernmost part of the profile, the magnitude of

    Sarmatian vertical movements was 15002000 m

    and fairly constant along the section. After the

    Sarmatian, subsidence continued over most of the

    profile although at a much lower rates. Similarly to

    previous times, little lateral differences are ob-

    served.

    A similar 2D basement restoration in the northern

    part of the Moesian Platform (Fig. 10B) shows a

    more regular pattern with subsidence gradually

    increasing towards the east, as a result of flexural

    loading of the lower plate in the front of the

    Carpathians. This overall pattern remained fairly

    constant through time suggesting a persistence of

    the mechanisms driving subsidence. Although the

    largest movements are recorded during the Sarmatian

    (3000 m near the Carpathians front), also Pliocene

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 7194 85

  • subsidence is significant (3500 m near the thrust

    front).

    4. Tectonic model

    The subsidence analysis carried out can be corre-

    lated with the increasingly detailed kinematic picture

    which is emerging from a large amount of structural

    and tectonic data (e.g., Ratschbacher et al., 1993;

    Csontos, 1995; Linzer, 1996; Matenco, 1997;

    Matenco et al., 1997a; Bojar et al., 1998; Zweigel,

    1998; Zweigel et al., 1998; Sanders, 1998; Schmid et

    al., 1998; Ciulavu, 1999). According to these results,

    the evolution of the external Carpathians and the

    adjacent foreland areas is subdivided in four stages.

    For these stages, we have produced subsidence maps

    indicating the position of the basement in the

    various moments (Figs. 11 and 12). Tectonic stages

    for various parts of the Romanian Carpathians may be

    pinpointed also in Figs. 3 and 4.

    4.1. PaleogeneEarly Miocene

    The PaleogeneEarly Miocene timespan is mainly

    a period of nondeposition and/or erosion in large parts

    of the Carpathian foreland. The most significant

    exception was the Getic Depression and the western-

    most Moesian Platform corner where Paleogene

    Lower Miocene sediments are thick and widespread

    (Figs. 4 and 11).

    Large-scale N to E-ward movement and rotation of

    the Inner Carpathian units (median Dacides; Sandu-

    lescu, 1984) around the Moesian Platform during the

    PaleogeneEarly Miocene (Fig. 11) caused differ-

    ential deformations along the bent East Carpathi-

    ansSouth Carpathians fragment.

    During the Late EoceneEarly Oligocene, large-

    scale, orogen-parallel extension took place in the

    South Carpathians (Fig. 4), leading to rapid exhuma-

    tion of the Danubian basement in the footwall of the

    Getic detachment, reactivating mainly the Late Creta-

    ceous Getic sole thrust (Schmid et al., 1998; Matenco

    and Schmid, 1999). South of the window, the detach-

    ment was dipping underneath the Late Cretaceous

    foredeep, where normal faults with comparable ori-

    entation were also activated.

    During the MiddleLate Oligocene, the NE to E-

    ward clockwise rotation of the Inner Carpathians

    around Moesia (e.g., Patrascu et al., 1990, 1992,

    1994) led to dextral activation of the curved Cerna

    (Berza and Draganescu, 1988) and Timok faults

    Fig. 10. Basement subsidence through time along two sections across the South and the East Carpathians. Locations in Fig. 6. (A) Basement

    subsidence restoration along the profile in Fig. 5(b). (B) Basement subsidence along the profile A14 of Stefanescu and working group (1988).

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 719486

  • system and to opening of small-scale elongate trans-

    tensional (e.g., Petrosani) basins (see also Ratsch-

    bacher et al., 1993; Csontos, 1995; Schmid et al.,

    1998 and references therein). This rotation is respon-

    sible for reorienting the originally WSWENE trend-

    ing Getic detachment north of the Danubian window

    into its present NNWSSE position.

    During the Early Miocene, extension migrated

    from the Danubian units towards the foreland and

    continued mostly within the South Carpathians fore-

    deep (Fig. 4). In the Getic DepressionMoesian

    Platform area, the NE-ward movement of the Inner

    Carpathians led to the opening of dextral transten-

    sional corridors (Fig. 11). As commonly observed in

    Fig. 11. Structural map with deformation structures active during PaleogeneEarly Miocene along the western part of the South Carpathians

    Getic DepressionMoesian platform and contour map of the calculated basement subsidence at the end of the Burdigalian (16 Ma). CF =Cerna

    Fault.

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 7194 87

  • recent case studies (e.g., Ben-Avraham and Zoback,

    1992), the main normal faults formed parallel to the

    ENE-ward direction of dextral movement. Thick

    sedimentary successions were deposited in these

    corridors, presently buried below later Miocene

    Pliocene deposits in the west, and well exposed in

    the east of the Getic Depression. The width and

    depth of these areas were maximal in their central

    parts and decreased both to the W and towards the E

    (Fig. 11).

    Fig. 12. Subsidence maps for the Carpathians foreland. (A) Contour map of the calculated basement subsidence at the end of Badenian and map

    of deformation structures active during the Middle Miocene along the external part of the Romanian Carpathians. (B) Contour map of the

    calculated basement subsidence at the end of Sarmatian and deformation structures active during the Late MioceneEarly Pliocene (Sarmatian

    Meotian) along the external part of the Romanian Carpathians. (C) Contour map of the calculated basement subsidence at the end of Pontian

    structural map with deformation structures active during the MiddleUpper Pliocene along the external part of the Romanian Carpathians.

    Absolute age correlations are made after the local Paratethys scale (see Figs. 3 and 4).

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 719488

  • 4.2. Middle Miocene (Late Burdigalian/Carpathian

    Badenian)

    Early Middle to Middle Miocene tectonics are

    characterised by NE to E-ward translation of the

    CarpathianPannonian system (Royden, 1988), asso-

    ciated with its extensional collapse and the subduction

    and roll-back of the lower plate (Horvath, 1993;

    Horvath and Cloetingh, 1996; Royden, 1988).

    During the Middle Miocene, the Outer Romanian

    Carpathians are dominated by a general ENEWSW

    to EW contraction, its effects being recognised both

    in the East and in the South Carpathians (Fig. 12A).

    In the central and southern part of the East Carpa-

    thians, ENEWSW to EW directed thrusting took

    place in the Tarcau and Marginal Folds nappes (Fig.

    3). Deformation began during the Late Burdigalian

    and probably persisted through the Badenian. Signifi-

    cant lateral differences in the style of deformation

    have been postulated in the East Carpathian wedge

    and associated with lateral changes of the thickness of

    the thrust sheets and/or with lateral variations of

    friction coefficients along the major detachment levels

    (Matenco, 1997). The northern segments of the East

    Carpathians (roughly north of 47jN parallel) tend tohave large internal deformations (closely spaced

    thrusts and folds, short thrust sheets, and duplexes)

    as well as low offset of the nappe pile over the

    foreland platforms. In contrast, the southern segments

    of the belt tend to form wide wedges, with long thrust

    sheets and widely spaced thrusts with low internal

    shortening (ramping associated with backthrusts), and

    high offset over the foreland.

    Subsidence in the foreland platforms in front of the

    Carpathians was limited and fairly homogenous at the

    large scale (Fig. 12A). Subsidence values are in the

    order of 200300 m in most places. In the East

    Carpathians, these low values are the result of the

    large distance between the locations where the base-

    ment subsidence values were computed and the Car-

    pathians thrust front where deformations was taking

    place at the Middle Miocene level. The area of

    possible basement subsidence associated with the

    Middle Miocene thrusts loading should be presently

    located underneath the more than 30-km thick exter-

    nal East Carpathians units. Their emplacement over

    the foreland platforms was acquired later on, during

    the Late Miocene episode (Matenco, 1997).

    At the transition between the East-European and

    the Moesian platforms, sectors with different thrust-

    ing geometries are kinematically linked by tear

    faulting reactivating preexisting EW trending plat-

    form faults. As a result, larger subsidence values

    are observed in the intermediate Scythian Platform

    (Fig. 12(A)).

    ENE-ward movement of the inner South Carpathi-

    ans upper plate induced small-scale contraction

    (NNWSSE striking thrusts) in the Getic Depression

    (Fig. 4). The thrusts offset increased to the west,

    probably associated with the already present bend of

    the western South Carpathians. Subsidence in the

    westernmost corner of the Moesian Platform took

    place mainly in small piggyback basins, in the hinter-

    land of most thrust lineaments.

    4.3. Late Miocene (Sarmatian)Early Pliocene

    (Meotian)

    The most important Tertiary tectonic event of the

    Carpathians and neighbouring platform areas took

    place during Late Miocene (Sarmatian) (Fig. 12B).

    Large-scale differential contraction and uplift in the

    Outer East Carpathians and transcurrent deformations

    in the external South CarpathiansGetic Depression

    occurred during thermal cooling and postrift sedimen-

    tation in the Pannonian Basin (Horvath, 1993; Hor-

    vath and Cloetingh, 1996).

    4.3.1. Late Miocene (1211 Ma)

    In the Outer Romanian Carpathians, Late Miocene

    tectonics were characterised by large-scale eastward

    motion of the inner East and South Carpathians,

    causing differential contraction and uplift in the East

    Carpathians and right-lateral shearing along a roughly

    EW trending corridor between South Carpathians

    and Moesian Platform (Fig. 12B).

    Once more, the contraction pattern was influenced

    by the structure of the underthrusted platforms. The

    most advanced East Carpathians nappes reached the

    East-European block in the northern sectors. The

    introduction into the subduction system of this East-

    European block with up to 50-km thick crust and very

    thick lithosphere strongly modified the boundary

    conditions, thus resulting in major changes in the

    thrust geometry. The most important consequence

    was the onset of substantial uplift in the rear part of

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 7194 89

  • the orogenic wedge (Sanders, 1998; Huismans, 1999).

    Fission track analysis (Sanders, 1998) shows that

    exhumation became important in the internal East

    Carpathians at 1113 Ma (Late Miocene). The overall

    Late BurdigalianSarmatian tectonic phase is mainly

    responsible for the present-day double vergent geom-

    etry of the East Carpathians and to the up to the 4-km

    accelerated exhumation of the rocks (e.g., Sanders,

    1998) probably associated with the activation of

    regional backthrusts in the internal part of the orogen

    and along the NE margin of the Transylvania Basin.

    In addition, the reduced thickness of the East-Euro-

    pean successions involved in shortening provoked a

    narrowing of the wedge and a transition to closer-

    spaced thrusts and shorter thrust sheets. The slow-

    down or cessation of frontal thrusting has been con-

    sidered as representative for a progressive migration

    of deformation towards the S (e.g., Csontos, 1995;

    Meulenkamp et al., 1996). This is not necessarily the

    case since forward thrusting was replaced by out-of-

    sequence thrusts in the more internal nappes, or

    backthrusts in the rear part of the orogen in the

    moment when the nappes reached the East-European

    Platform. The strong buoyancy of this platform and its

    vertical stability are clearly demonstrated by our

    subsidence analysis (Fig. 9(A) and (B1)).

    None of such changes took place in the southern

    segments of the chain where the thinner and substan-

    tially weaker Moesian plate (e.g., Lankreijer et al.,

    1997) was still involved in subduction. Large-scale

    tear faults developed in the lower plate between the

    two platform (East-European/Moesian) areas (i.e.,

    TrotusBistrita faults). This lead to the initiation of

    large-scale subsidence during the Sarmatian times in

    the Scythian Platform, but most importantly, in the

    Moesian Platform, where strong Sarmatian subsidence

    is recorded in the foreland of the thrust front, and

    further to the E in the Focsani Depression (Fig. 12B).

    Further to the south, the eastward motion of the

    Inner Carpathians was accommodated by large-scale

    EW dextral shearing within the South Carpathians,

    in the South Carpathians foredeep and Moesian Plat-

    form. However, the 130150 km Miocene shortening

    of the East Carpathians (Roure et al., 1993; Ellouz and

    Roca, 1994; Ellouz et al., 1994) cannot be entirely

    taken up by the right-lateral movements within the

    South Carpathians and Getic Depression, where total

    displacements are in order of tens of kilometers. Part

    of this dextral displacement could alternatively be

    taken up by the South Transylvania and associated

    faults, which deformed the Late MiocenePliocene

    series in the internal Brsei Depression (see also

    Ciulavu, 1999).

    4.3.2. Latest MioceneEarly Pliocene (119 Ma)

    In the late stages of the E-ward motion episode

    (Late SarmatianMeotian corresponding to latest

    MioceneEarly Pliocene), strike-slip deformations

    took place in front of the East Carpathians, as often

    observed in purely contractional to oblique thrust belts

    (e.g., Ratschbacher et al., 1992). This episode was

    mainly dextral transpressional in the southern areas

    and sinistral in the northern part of the East Carpa-

    thians, accommodating the SE lateral migration of the

    plate boundary activity. This strike-slip episode is

    plotted together with the previous Late Miocene

    episode in the same Fig. 12B.

    Two different domains can be distinguished in the

    Romanian Carpathians (Fig. 12(B)).

    (A) In the Getic Depression and in the SW termi-

    nation of the East Carpathians, transpressional struc-

    tures formed in a strike-slip stress field with roughly

    NS compression. Dextral faults often reactivated

    older faults. Associated NNESSW sinistral faults

    are common in the foredeep and external parts of South

    Carpathians. Large EW striking thrusts occurred in

    the frontal part of the Getic foredeep, and were asso-

    ciated with strong basement subsidence in the frontal

    part of the Pericarpathian line.

    (B) In the central East Carpathians, a strike-slip

    stress field with NNESSW compression direction

    induced sinistral displacement along EW to NE

    SW trending faults such as Trotus and related (e.g.,

    Bistrita) structures. Transcurrent faulting was, how-

    ever, widespread both in the upper and lower plates.

    In the bend zone (Fig. 12B), the two dominant

    fault systems, dextral NWSE trending in the South

    Carpathians and sinistral ENEWSW directed in the

    central East Carpathians, interacted, resulting in SE-

    ward movement of the area bounded by the Intra-

    moesian and Trotus/Bistrita faults. Despite the large

    number of strike-slip faults observed, the total dis-

    placement of this domain during the latest Miocene

    Early Pliocene did not exceed few tens of kilometers

    in the external part of the Romanian Carpathians

    belt.

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 719490

  • Subsidence continued during this timespan (Fig.

    12(B)), especially in the Carpathians bend zone (e.g.,

    Figs. 9(B2), (B3), (C) and 10B) where up to 2000 m

    of basement subsidence were recorded during the Late

    SarmatianMeotian times. North of the Trotus Fault,

    the East-European Platform becomes vertically stable,

    no subsidence being recorded during the latest Mio-

    cene through Pliocene (Fig. 9(A) and (B1)). In the

    frontal part of the South Carpathians, subsidence

    continued in the Moesian Platform, especially in

    vicinity of the frontal sole thrust. About 10001500

    m of basement subsidence were recorded during this

    timespan, clearly smaller than the previous Sarmatian

    period (Fig. 8B).

    4.4. PliocenePleistocene

    Very little deformation, limited to EW to NE

    SW trending thrusts, took place during the Pliocene

    Pleistocene (Fig. 12(C)), nearly exclusively found in

    the southern corner of the East Carpathians (see also

    Hippolyte and Sandulescu, 1996; Hippolyte et al.,

    1999). Thrusts are often out-of-sequence and some-

    times reactivated latest Miocene transpressional

    structures. Thrusting was coeval with strong subsi-

    dence in the area south of the Focsani Depression

    and east of the Intramoesian Fault (e.g., compare

    basement position in Fig. 12(C) with the present one

    in Fig. 2(A)). Here, up to 4 km of Pliocene sub-

    sidence is observed, higher than the 23 km re-

    corded during Sarmatian times (e.g., Fig. 9(B4) and

    (B5)).

    Note that the major subsidence for the Focsani

    DepressionVrancea area was acquired already dur-

    ing the Late Miocene to Early Pliocene (e.g., compare

    Focsani subsidence at the end of Sarmatian in Fig.

    12(B) to total Tertiary values in Fig. 2(A)) and not

    PliocenePleistocene as previously suggested (e.g.,

    Sperner, 1996; Sperner et al., 1999; Wenzel and

    Mocanu, 1999). During the Pliocene, the subsidence

    depocenter had shifted southward, towards the SW-

    most corner of the East Carpathians foreland.

    5. Conclusions

    The Tertiary evolution of the Romanian Outer

    Carpathians and their foreland can be summarised in

    two major periods, from the Paleogene to the Sarma-

    tian and from the Sarmatian to present.

    The first stage, Paleogene to Sarmatian, is basically

    characterised by the right-lateral displacement of the

    Inner Carpathians with respect to the Moesian fore-

    land. In the Inner Carpathians/Pannonian basin, this

    resulted in overall dextral transpression accompanied

    by large-scale rotations along an EW directed corri-

    dor and, beginning from the Middle Miocene, trans-

    tensional deformation characterised by rifting and

    subsequent cooling phase in the Pannonian basin.

    The deformation pattern in the Outer Carpathians

    was different. The area in front of the South Carpa-

    thians and of the southern termination of the East

    Carpathians underwent PaleogeneEarly Miocene

    orogen-parallel extension to transtension, followed

    by Middle to Late Miocene right-lateral transpression

    to contraction. In contrast, the regions adjacent to the

    East Carpathians were affected by pure to oblique

    contraction throughout the entire timespan from the

    Lower Miocene to the Sarmatian.

    The subsidence pattern recorded in the Carpathians

    foreland during Paleogene to Sarmatian is character-

    ised by significant vertical motions. The opening of

    the Early Miocene transtensional basin in the Getic

    Depression/western Moesian Platform led to the accu-

    mulation of up to 5 km of Lower Burdigalian sedi-

    ments, while other platform areas were characterised

    by nondeposition and/or erosion. Smaller subsidence

    values are recorded in the same area in connection

    with Middle Miocene thrusting. Starting with the

    Sarmatian, the entire Romanian foreland platform area

    starts to subside, the major depocenter of the foreland

    basin being located in the Focsani Depression (e.g., a

    rate of 15003000 m/Ma in and around the Focsani

    Depression for the Late Miocene). In contrast with

    previously proposed scenarios (e.g., Meulenkamp et

    al., 1996), our data do not support the notion of

    MiddleLate Miocene systematic depocenters migra-

    tion along the East Carpathians foreland.

    This picture changed substantially when, in the

    Late Sarmatian (latest Miocene), the East Carpathians

    thrust belt reached the East-European Platform. This

    not only imposed a change in the style of thrusting in

    the East Carpathians but also caused some significant

    changes in the mechanical properties of the system.

    Indeed, from this moment, the entire Carpathian

    system and its foreland started behaving as a single

    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 7194 91

  • block with similar stress field being documented from

    both the Intra- and Outer Carpathian units. The stress

    field was strike-slip with NESW to NS directed

    compression until the Early Pliocene and then com-

    pressional with NNWSSE oriented r1 afterwards.Subsidence associated with Late Miocene thrusting

    and dextral transpression increased in the area

    between the Intramoesian and the Trotus/Bistrita

    faults due to larger SE-ward displacements. During

    the Middle Pliocene to Pleistocene, the subsidence in

    the Focsani Depression is significantly decreased

    (e.g., a rate of 200300 m/Ma for the whole Plio-

    cenePleistocene). The depocenter of the basin is

    located southward, at the East Carpathians SW edge.

    This suggests a causal relationship between the large-

    scale subsidence and that of the deep Pliocene

    Focsani Depression during the Sarmatian. Younger

    subsidence and basin fill would then be a prolongation

    of the earlier mechanism. In this context, the previ-

    ously suggested relationship (e.g., Sperner, 1996;

    Girbacea and Frisch, 1998; Linzer et al., 1998; Zwei-

    gel et al., 1998; Wenzel and Mocanu, 1999 and

    references therein) between a possible advanced slab

    retreat (senso Royden, 1993) and slab break-off (senso

    Wortel et al., 1993) in SE East Carpathians corner at

    the PliocenePleistocene level, and the subsidence of

    the Focsani Depression plus Vrancea deep earth-

    quakes is questionable. Such a foreland slab position

    is debatable also due to the absence of any clear

    influence of the Focsani Depression on the basement

    crustal map (Fig. 2B). Good seismic and tomographic

    images of the deep configuration will soon be avail-

    able (e.g., Wenzel et al., 1998) and will provide

    further constraints.

    The southern part of the East Carpathians and its

    foreland have Tertiary structural characteristics more

    similar to those of the South Carpathians foreland

    (Getic Depression) than to the central and northern

    segments of East Carpathians. The classical separation

    between the East and South Carpathians in the exter-

    nal areas along the Intramoesian Fault is, in this

    respect, somewhat arbitrary.

    The reconstruction of the Tertiary evolution of the

    Romanian Carpathians foreland presented in this

    paper has demonstrated the existence of comparable

    kinematic episodes simultaneously occurring in the

    frontal part of both East and South Carpathians.

    Similar patterns appear to exist at the scale of the

    Carpathians belt as a whole. Subsidence analysis has

    demonstrated the (re)activation of major platform

    faults during the MiocenePliocene tectonic episodes,

    providing constraints for the quantitative assessment

    of the lateral variations in the emplacement mecha-

    nism of various tectonic units.

    Acknowledgements

    The research carried out in this paper was possible

    due to Peri-Tethys Programme funding. L.M. ac-

    knowledges this project for partially funding his PhD

    thesis. M. Wagreich, F. Roure, F. Horvath and G.

    Bada are thanked for their reviews which helped us to

    improve the paper. This is publication no. 20020904

    of the Netherlands Research School of Sedimentary

    Geology.

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    L. Matenco et al. / Sedimentary Geology 156 (2003) 719494

    IntroductionStructure of the autochthonous platformsEast-European and Scythian PlatformsMoesian PlatformNorth Dobrogea orogen

    Subsidence evolution of the Romanian foreland platforms on the basis of burial history restorationMethodResults

    Tectonic modelPaleogene-Early MioceneMiddle Miocene (Late Burdigalian/Carpathian-Badenian)Late Miocene (Sarmatian)-Early Pliocene (Meotian)Late Miocene (12-11 Ma)Latest Miocene-Early Pliocene (11-9 Ma)

    Pliocene-Pleistocene

    ConclusionsAcknowledgementsReferences


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