Abstract

The Pieniny Klippen Belt is a narrow, complex structure stretching along a tectonic boundary between the Central and Outer Carpathians. Its formation involved two main evolutionary stages, the first, related to Late Cretaceous-Paleocene folding and thrusting, and the second, associated with Miocene orogenic events in the Outer Carpathians. Interactions between the Pieniny Klippen Belt and Outer Carpathians during both the sedimentation and deformation stages have resulted in the establishment of a peri-klippen transitional zone (named the Saris Transitional Zone), in which the tectonic deformation effects gradually decrease towards the north. The stratigraphy and tectonic position of this zone have been controversial for decades. The key stratigraphic problems concern 1) the lithologic identity and position of the Szlachtowa (“black flysch”), Opaleniec and Pieniny formations and 2) the relation of the Jarmuta Formation, associated mainly with the Saris Transitional Zone, to the Szczawnica and Zarzecze formations of the Magura Nappe. We provide an early Paleogene dinoflagellate cyst stratigraphic record of deposits that, according to some recent reinterpretations, represent the Neogene “Kremna Formation”. The legitimacy of new lithostratigraphic assignments of the “Kremna Formation” at Jaworki is put into question upon the basis of the primacy of units introduced for the same strata earlier.

Highlights

  • The Pieniny Klippen Belt (PKB) represents a ca. 600–700 km long trace of a major suture located between the Central and Outer Carpathians (Figs. 1, 2)

  • Central Carpathian Paleogene Outer Carpathians (Magura Nappe) Pieniny Klippen Belt units Central Carpathians (Krížna Nappe) regional-size faults andesite dyke state frontier field session stops

  • The PKB in the Małe Pieniny Mts. does not represent a sub-vertical and deep-rooted structure and it is only a zone of tectonic remnants floating on the rear rim of the Magura Nappe

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Summary

TECTONIC EVOLUTION OF THE PIENINY KLIPPEN BELT

The Pieniny Klippen Belt (PKB) represents a ca. 600–700 km long trace of a major suture located between the Central and Outer Carpathians (Figs. 1, 2). The PKB sedimentary sequences can be divided into two main complexes: a “rigid” carbonate rocks – dominated complex of Middle Jurassic-Late Cretaceous age, and a ductile complex of shales, marls and flysch rocks of Late Cretaceous age. The third rock complex, in most cases less significant than the other two because of its smaller thickness, consists of ductile Lower-to-Middle Jurassic marls, shales and mudstones. This contrasting lithology of sedimentary sequences was responsible for the PKB disintegration into isolated klippen during a complex tectonic evolution (Birkenmajer 1959)

Neogene and Quaternary faults
VrchovinaÚdol of Šariš Transitional Zone
INFLUENCE OF THE PLATFORM BASEMENT ON THE PKB STRUCTURE
Central Carpathian Block
THE GRAJCAREK SUCCESSION AND SOME CONTROVERSIES CONCERNING ITS STRATIGRAPHY
Jurassic Cretaceous
The Czorsztyn Succession in Krupianka Creek Tomasz Segit
The Grajcarek Succession in Krupianka Creek Tomasz Segit
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