Abstract
Early Neogene saline lakes were widely developed across Central Paratethys, particularly across its „Dinaride-Anatolide“ landbridge (area of Dinarides, Balkans). The constraints on Lopare (western part of Jadar block; eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina) and Toplica (Jastrebac Mt., central Serbia) Neogene paleolakes provide a better understanding of deep-time climate evolution. The study focused on early Neogene paleolacustrine configuration, paleogeography, and the factors affecting a considerable paleosalinity increase. The study integrated available records on the predominantly Lower Miocene sedimentary sequence by analyzing and interpreting several paleosalinity markers (inorganic geochemical proxies, mineralogical data). The constraints on paleosalinity markers are afterward coupled with rather complex tectonic inferences. The two wellbores drilled in the Lopare and Toplica basins expose Neogene sections from which the critical paleosalinity markers are extracted (drillhole depths up to 350 and 1000 m, respectively). The mineral searlesite (NaBSi2O5(OH)2), and high B/Ga, markers of alkaline and arid paleoenvironmental lacustrine conditions, suggested intense evaporation (frequent drought periods). The evaporation was associated with paleoclimatic conditions during the Miocene Climatic Optimum. The Early Neogene arid climate and frequent evaporation episodes resulted in significant salinization of the Lower Miocene Lopare lacustrine sequence. The salinity in the Lopare sequence changed its character between brackish and saline, as evidenced by S/TOC and Ca/(Ca + Fe) ratios (TOC—Total Organic Carbon). At the same time, the salinity in the early Toplica basin was significantly lower and characterized by freshwater and brackish environments. The salinity variations between Toplica and Lopare were further exposed by Fe/(Ca + Mg), (Al + Fe)/(Ca + Mg), and C-value, yielding the change in the (paleo)water column. These markers further indicated the influence of warm climate conditions, consistent with the Miocene paleoclimatic record. Regarding paleogeography and Early Neogene tectonics, the results showed that before the Middle Miocene Badenian transgression, the Paratethyan Sea had no interference with the investigated intramontane lacustrine basins.
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