Abstract

During the Quaternary, the Lower Volga region was typically a shallow shelf of the Caspian Sea. This region regularly and distinctively responded to sea level fluctuations by changing both sediments and biota. This region is therefore a key to understanding the history of the transgressive-regressive cycles of the Caspian Sea during the Quaternary. There is a wealth of information about the Quaternary deposits of the Lower Volga region; however, their diversity of facies, erosional processes, and fragmented sections create difficulties in stratigraphic interpretation and the development of paleogeographic models. The studied 500-m section of borehole 8 Ulan-Khol is among the few in the Caspian region that allows for the sequential reconstruction of the Quaternary history of the region in one section. These borehole data offer a unique opportunity to reconstruct transgressive-regressive cycles in Pleistocene basins located in the most southeastern part of Europe (the Caspian region). Based on biostratigraphic, sedimentological, and paleomagnetic methods, we were able to define main Early, Middle, and Late Pleistocene units, which were correlated with regional stratigraphical units. Each unit corresponds to regional paleogeographic events and sedimentation modes characterized either by basinal (brackish water) or continental conditions when lagoons and fluvial landscapes dominated. The borehole interpretation integrated with regional data demonstrates a complex history of Caspian basin development during Apsheronian time (MIS 63–20) with the presence of a strong regression in its final stage, accompanied by a previously unknown advance of the Paleo-Volga valley to the latitude of Astrakhan city and further south. This regression and the formation of the Paleo-Volga valley continued during Tyurkyanian time (MIS 19). By the end of the Tyurkyanian, the regression was followed by a transgressive stage, which culminated in Bakunian time (MIS 18–12). The Khazarian stage (MIS 11–5) of Caspian Sea development was characterized by a constant change from alluvial-marine to marine and estuarine environments. The borehole data support our earlier conclusion that the Singilian deposits separate the lower (MIS 11–7) and upper (MIS 5) Khazarian units. New data support the existence of only one transgression of the Caspian Sea during Khvalynian time (MIS 3–2); after its maximum stage the sea level gradually decreased with the formation of coastlines at several terrace levels. Due to its high deposit thickness and rich paleontological, stratigraphic and lithological information, Ulan-Khol borehole 8 can be considered a key site for the Northern Caspian area.

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