Abstract

Lake Pannon, covering the Pannonian Basin (Hungary) during the Late Miocene, had a complex lake bottom with deeper sub-basins and intrabasinal basement highs, sometimes emerging above the lake level as islands and peninsulas. Above structural highs, the basin fill sequence usually commenced with deposition of transgressional, locally sourced coarse-grained deltas. These deposits are overlain by distally-sourced deltaic bodies associated with the prograding delta system that gradually filled up the entire basin. The transition between these two distinct delta systems was studied in a large outcrop on the edge of a former basement high (Mecsek Mts., southern Hungary). The transgressional phase is represented by the deposition of a mass flow dominated fan delta body, fed by local material from a granitic catchment area. An overlying fossil-rich, clayey unit records an episode for which sediment delivery into the basin was curtailed, possibly due to submergence of the granite body. The deposition of these two units took place between 8 and 6.8 Ma. The onset of sedimentation associated with the arrival of the distally sourced regressive delta system (around 6.8 Ma) is represented by deposition of shoreface sediments. This unit is characterized by distinctive bioturbation and storm related, sand filled scour-fills. Resedimented local material that forms mm thick, coarse laminas in the scour fills is indicative of denudation due to tectonic events and implies coupled storm-flood sedimentation. The deposition of the two distinct delta bodies and the interplay between tectonic events and lake-level changes occurred during a relatively short, ca. 1.5 Ma long time interval.

Highlights

  • Alluvial fans and fan deltas can form in various tectonic settings

  • Locally-sourced, coarse-grained deltas formed around intrabasinal highs during the transgression of the Late Miocene Lake Pannon (Sztanó et al 2016), which occupied the Pannonian basin (Hungary) until Early Pliocene

  • The aim of this study is to describe the depositional settings of two superimposed deltaic bodies, associated with the two different deltaic systems, as exposed in a large sandpit that uniquely records their transition in southern Hungary

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Summary

Introduction

Alluvial fans and fan deltas can form in various tectonic settings. Their facies architecture is sensitive to water level changes, climate, and catchment area lithology (Steel 1976; Nemec and Steel 1988; McCallum and Robertson 1995; Martins-Neto 1996; López-Blanco et al 2000; Muravchik et al 2014; Martini et al 2017; Lin et al 2018). The. Locally-sourced, coarse-grained deltas formed around intrabasinal highs during the transgression of the Late Miocene Lake Pannon (Sztanó et al 2016), which occupied the Pannonian basin (Hungary) until Early Pliocene. The study was accomplished by specific research objectives, such as giving detailed sedimentological description to determine the depositional environments and lake level changes, and carrying out structural and paleontological analysis to constrain a structural and time framework for the deposition.

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