Abstract

An integrated stratigraphic study has been performed of the Lower Miocene deposits of the Poljanska and Mala sections (North Croatian Basin), coupled with 40Ar/39Ar dating, geochemical and mineralogical study of tuffitic and silty sand beds. The sedimentary record evidences deposition influenced by volcaniclastic input. The presence of marine, brackish and non–marine microfossils indicates complex palaeoenvironment, palaeoecology, and palaeobiogeography. Four different units were recognized based on their fossil content and sedimentological data. At the base of the Poljanska section (Unit P1), tuffitic sediments bear common endemic brackish, and rare marine to freshwater and terrestrial microfossils. Radiometric 40Ar/39Ar dating obtained on volcanic glass shards from this layer provided an age of 22.2 ± 1.9 Ma correlating with the earliest Early Miocene and indicating the existence of older volcanic activity in the NCB pro tempore. The succession transitions into the brackish-water lacustrine environments (Unit P2). This unit has two presumed different climatic events: a maximum temperature event in the lower part of the interval and one interruption with lower temperatures recognized in the upper part of the interval. The co-occurrence of limnic and marine species in the uppermost part of the investigated sediments (Unit P3) indicates a marine inflow into the coastal lake. It marks the beginning of a salina-type lake formation in Poljanska. In the Mala section (Unit M1), biostratigraphically dated to the NN4 Zone, a transgressive sequence is documented through the presence of marine calcareous nannoplankton, planktonic and benthic foraminifera, and ostracods.

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