Abstract
The 1,500- to 2,000-m-thick Permian volcano-sedimentary Malužina Formation of the uppermost nappe of the Central Western Carpathians (a segment of the Alpine-Carpathian orogenic belt) occurs in several fault blocks distributed across Slovakia. This unit is a part of a post-Variscan overstep suite that followed accretion of the Gothic terranes to Laurussia. It consists of three upward-fining megacycles of semi-arid/arid, fluvial-lacustrine clastic redbeds and local dolomites and evaporites. Abundant intercalated volcanic rocks are predominantly mafic lava flows; volcaniclastic rocks and dykes are subordinate. Felsic rocks are represented by rare volcaniclastics and dykes. Compositionally, the mafic rocks are rift-related continental tholeiites with enriched light REE patterns having (La/Yb)n ratios between 2 and 5.5 and with mantle-normalized patterns characterized by negative Nb-Ta anomalies. The rocks were derived from subcontinental lithospheric mantle and were affected by crustal contamination. It is inferred that the volcanism of the Malužina Formation formed in a Basin and Range tectonic setting in which rifting followed collision of the Palaeo-Tethys ridge with the trench bordering southern Laurussia. This model can be applied to other Permian volcanic suites of rift basins in the Eastern Alps and Carpathians over a strike-length of about 1,000 km, which indicates the width of the slab window.
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