2006
DOI: 10.2298/gabp0667013t
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Trans-border (east Serbia/west Bulgaria) correlation of the Jurassic sediments: Main Jurassic paleogeographic units

Abstract: In the region across the Serbian/Bulgarian state border, there are individualized 5 Jurassic paleogeographic units (from West to East): (1) the Thracian Massif Unit without Jurassic sediments; (2) the Lužnica-Koniavo Unit - partially with Liassic in Grsten facies and with deep water Middle Callovian-Kimmeridgian (p. p) sediments of the type "ammonitico rosso", and Upper Kimmeridgian-Tithonian siliciclastics flysch; (3) The Getic Unit subdivided into two subunits - the Western Getic Sub-Uni - without Lower Jura… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…However, the evidence contained in these papers has long been confined to the Bulgarian/ Serbian state border, and what is beyond the border, in northeastern Serbia, has been known mainly from the publications of Serbian geologists (e.g., Andjelković and Petković, 1975;Andjelković et al 1996;Radulović et al, 1997). During the previous decade, successful correlations between the Jurassic lithostratigraphic units in NW Bulgaria and NE Serbia were made (Tchoumatchenco et al, 2006a(Tchoumatchenco et al, , 2006b(Tchoumatchenco et al, , 2008(Tchoumatchenco et al, , 2010a(Tchoumatchenco et al, , 2010b(Tchoumatchenco et al, , 2011. A result of this is that correlations between the Bulgarian and Serbian Jurassic lithostratigraphic successions have now attained the highest levels of reliability and detail.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the evidence contained in these papers has long been confined to the Bulgarian/ Serbian state border, and what is beyond the border, in northeastern Serbia, has been known mainly from the publications of Serbian geologists (e.g., Andjelković and Petković, 1975;Andjelković et al 1996;Radulović et al, 1997). During the previous decade, successful correlations between the Jurassic lithostratigraphic units in NW Bulgaria and NE Serbia were made (Tchoumatchenco et al, 2006a(Tchoumatchenco et al, , 2006b(Tchoumatchenco et al, , 2008(Tchoumatchenco et al, , 2010a(Tchoumatchenco et al, , 2010b(Tchoumatchenco et al, , 2011. A result of this is that correlations between the Bulgarian and Serbian Jurassic lithostratigraphic successions have now attained the highest levels of reliability and detail.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The boundaries of the Izdremets Basin are to the northeast with Vratza Horst, to the south-west -with Dragoman Horst and to the south-east with the Nish-Troyan flysch trough. To the west, the Izdremets Basin continued on the territory of East Serbia (Tchoumatchenco et al, 2006a, b). Tchoumatchenco (2006) included the studied succession to the Jurassic Izdremets Graben Unit.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The terms "Štramberk Limestone" and "Štramberk-type limestones" have been widely used in the area of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire for the field description of shallow-water limestones of assumed Late Jurassic age, usually occurring within flysch deposits of the Outer Carpathians. Upper Jurassic-lowermost Cretaceous shallow-water limestones in Romania (commonly forming mountains or ridges, e.g., Pleş et al, 2013Pleş et al, , 2016, in Bulgaria and Serbia (Tchoumatchenco et al, 2006), and Ukraine (Krajewski and Schlagintweit, 2018), and in Turkey (Masse et al, 2015) sometimes are referred to as the Štramberk-type limestones as well. In the Austrian-German literature similar limestones in the Alps are known as the Plassen Limestone (e.g., Steiger and Wurm, 1980;Schlagintweit et al, 2005).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%