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Paratethys

The Paratethys sea, Paratethys ocean, Paratethys realm or just Paratethys was a large shallow inland sea that stretched from the region north of the Alps over Central Europe to the Aral Sea in Central Asia.

Palaeogeographical reorganization of the Tethys–Paratethys region during the Paleogene, from a connected Tethys configuration during the early Eocene (above) to a fragmented and restricted Paratethys region configuration during the Oligocene (below). Note the loss of deep-water connections between the Indian Ocean region and the Mediterranean, the complete loss of Indian–Arctic Ocean connections, and the closure of most of the Eocene seaways in the Oligocene time.[1]
Megafaunal diversity of the Paratethys megalake included cetaceans and pinnipeds most notably the Cetotherium riabinini went thorough a presumed insular dwarfism.

Paratethys was peculiar due to its paleogeography: it consisted of a series of deep basins, formed during the Oxfordian stage of the Late Jurassic as an extension of the rift that formed the Central Atlantic Ocean. These basins were connected with each other and the global ocean by narrow and shallow seaways that often limited water exchange and caused widespread long-term anoxia.[1]

Paratethys was at times reconnected with the Tethys or its successors (the Mediterranean Sea or the Indian Ocean) during the Oligocene and the early and middle Miocene times, but at the onset of the late Miocene epoch, the tectonically trapped sea turned into a megalake from the eastern Alps to what is now Kazakhstan.[2] From the Pliocene epoch onward (after 5 million years ago), Paratethys became progressively shallower. Today's Black Sea, Caspian Sea, Aral Sea, Lake Urmia, Namak Lake and others are remnants of the Paratethys Sea.

Paratethys formed about 34 Mya (million years ago) at the beginning of the Oligocene epoch,[3] when the northern region of the Tethys Ocean (Peri-Tethys) was separated from the Mediterranean region of the Tethys realm due to the formation of the Alps, Carpathians, Dinarides, Taurus and Elburz mountains. During the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods, this part of Eurasia was covered by shallow seas that formed the northern margins of the Tethys Ocean. However, because Anatolia, the southern boundary of the Paleo-Tethys Ocean, is a part of the original continent of Cimmeria, the last remnant of the Paleo-Tethys might be oceanic crust under the Black Sea. The Tethys Ocean formed between Laurasia (Eurasia and North America) and Gondwana (Africa, India, Antarctica, Australia and South America) when the supercontinent Pangaea broke up during the Triassic (200 million years ago).

Name and research edit

The name Paratethys was first used by Vladimir Laskarev in 1924.[4] Laskarev's definition included only fossils and sedimentary strata from the sea of the Neogene system. This definition was later adjusted also to include the Oligocene series. The existence of a separate water body in these periods was deduced from the fossil fauna, including mollusks, fish and ostracods. In periods in which the Paratethys or parts of it were separated from each other or from other oceans, a separate fauna developed which is found in sedimentary deposits. In this way, the paleogeographical development of the Paratethys can be studied. Laskerev's description of the Paratethys was anticipated much earlier by Sir Roderick Murchison in chapter 13 of his 1845 book.[5]

One of the key characteristics of the Paratethys realm, that is differentiating it from the Tethys Ocean, is the widespread development of endemic fauna, adapted to fresh and brackish waters like those that still exist in recent waters of the Caspian Sea. This distinctive fauna in which univalves of freshwater origin such as Limnex and Neritinex are associated with forms of Cardiacae and Mytili, common to partially saline or brackish waters, makes the geologic records from Paratethys particularly difficult to correlate with those from other oceans or seas because their faunas evolved separately at times. Stratigraphers of the Paratethys, therefore, have their own sets of stratigraphic stages which are still used as alternatives for the official geologic timescale of the ICS.

Palaeogeographic evolution edit

The Paratethys spread over a large area in Central Europe and western Asia. In the west it included in some stages the Molasse basin north of the Alps; the Vienna Basin, the Outer Carpathian Basin, the Pannonian Basin, and further east to the basin of the current Black Sea and the Caspian Sea until the current position of the Aral Sea.

Anoxic Giant edit

The boundary between the Eocene and Oligocene epochs was characterized by a big drop of the global (eustatic) sea level and sudden steep cooling of global climates. At the same time the Alpine orogeny, a tectonic phase by which the Alps, Carpathians, Dinarides, Taurus, Elburz and many other mountain chains along the southern rim of Eurasia were formed. The combination of a drop in sea level and tectonic uplift resulted in the partial disconnection of the Tethys and Paratethys domains. Due to poor connectivity with the global ocean, the Paratethys realm became stratified and turned into a giant anoxic sea.

The western and central Paratethys basins experienced intense tectonic activity and anoxia during the Oligocene and early Miocene and became filled with sediments. Local gypsum and salt evaporitic basins formed in the East Carpathian region during the early Miocene. The Eastern Paratethys basin, holding most of the water of Paratethys, remained anoxic for almost 20 million years (35–15 Mya), and during this time Paratethys acted as an enormous carbon sink[1] trapping organic matter in its sediments. The Paratethys anoxia was "shut down"[6] during the middle Miocene, some 15 million years ago, when a widespread marine transgression, known as the Badenian Flooding, improved connections with the global ocean and triggered the ventilation of the deep waters of Paratethys.[7]

Short-lived open seas edit

After the Badenian Flooding, in the middle Miocene, Paratethys was characterized by open-marine environments. Brackish and lacustrine basins turned into ventilated seas. Rich marine fauna containing sharks (e.g., megalodon), corals, marine mammals, foraminifera and nanoplankton spread throughout Paratethys from the neighbouring Mediterranean region, probably via the Trans-Tethyan Corridor, an ancient sea-strait located in modern Slovenia.[8]

Salt Giants edit

The open marine environments of Paratethys were short-lived, and halfway through the middle Miocene, progressive uplift of the central European mountain ranges and a eustatic drop isolated Paratethys from the global ocean triggering a salinity crisis in Central Paratethys. The "Badenian Salinity Crisis"[9] spanned between 13.8 and 13.4 Mya.[10] Thick evaporitic beds (salt and gypsum) formed in the Outer Carpathians, Transylvanian and Pannonian basins. Salt mines extract this middle-Miocene salt in Transylvania: Turda, Ocna Mures, Ocna Sibiului and Praid; in the Eastern and Carpathians: Wieliczka, Bochnia, Cacica and Slanic Prahova; and Ocnele Mari in the Southern Carpathians, but evaporites are also present in areas west of the Carpathians: Maramureș, eastern Slovakia (Solivar mine near Prešov) and, to a lesser extent, in the Pannonian depression in central Hungary.

Megalake edit

Some 12 million years ago, slightly before the onset of the late Miocene, the ancient sea transformed into a megalake that covered more than 2.8 million square kilometers, from the eastern Alps to what is now Kazakhstan, and characterized by salinities generally ranging between 12 and 14%. During its five-million-year lifetime, the megalake was home to many species found nowhere else, including molluscs and ostracods as well as miniature versions of whales, dolphins and seals.[2][11] In 2023, Guinness World Records named this lake the largest in earth's history.[12] Near the end of the Miocene, an event known as the Khersonian crisis, marked by rapidly fluctuating environmental factors and sea levels, wiped out much of the unique fish fauna of this megalake.[13]

After Paratethys edit

When parts of the Mediterranean fell dry during the Messinian salinity crisis (about 6 million years ago) there were phases when Paratethys water flowed into the deep Mediterranean basins. During the Pliocene epoch (5.33 to 2.58 million years ago) the former Paratethys was divided into a couple of inland seas that were at times completely separated from each other. An example was the Pannonian Sea, a brackish sea in the Pannonian Basin. Many of these would disappear before the start of the Pleistocene. At present, only the Black Sea, Caspian Sea and the Aral Sea remain of what was once a vast inland sea.

See also edit

  • Caspian Depression – Low-lying flatland region encompassing the northern part of the Caspian Sea
  • Piemont-Liguria Ocean – Former piece of oceanic crust that is seen as part of the Tethys Ocean
  • Zanclean flood – Theoretical refilling of the Mediterranean Sea between the Miocene and Pliocene Epochs
  • Paleo-Tethys Ocean – Ocean on the margin of Gondwana between the Middle Cambrian and Late Triassic

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Palcu, D.V.; Krijgsman, W. (2023). "The dire straits of Paratethys: gateways to the anoxic giant of Eurasia". Geological Society, London, Special Publications. 523 (1): 111–139. Bibcode:2023GSLSP.523...73P. doi:10.1144/SP523-2021-73. S2CID 245054442.
  2. ^ a b Perkins, Sid (June 4, 2021). "The rise and fall of the world's largest lake". sciencemag.org. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  3. ^ Stampfli, Gérard. (PDF). University of Lausanne. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-01-13.
  4. ^ Laskarev, V. (1924). "Sur les equivalents du Sarmatien superieur en Serbie". In Vujević, P. (ed.). Recueil de Travaux Offert à M. Jovan Cvijic par ses Amis et Collaborateurs. Beograd: Drzhavna Shtamparija. pp. 73–85. OCLC 760139740.
  5. ^ Murchison, Roderick Impey; de Verneuil, P.E.; von Keyserling, A. (1845). On the Geology of Russia in Europe and the Ural Mountains. Vol. 1. London: John Murray. pp. 297–323.
  6. ^ Palcu, D.V.; Popov, S.V.; Golovina, L.; Kuiper, K.F.; Liu, S.; Krijgsman, W. (March 2019). "The shutdown of an anoxic giant: Magnetostratigraphic dating of the end of the Maikop Sea". Gondwana Research. 67: 82–100. Bibcode:2019GondR..67...82P. doi:10.1016/j.gr.2018.09.011. hdl:1871.1/9f40acfe-86d3-44da-bf25-832c79f4c22f. S2CID 134737570.
  7. ^ Sant, K.; Palcu, D.V.; Mandic, O.; Krijgsman, W. (2017). "Changing seas in the Early–Middle Miocene of Central Europe: a Mediterranean approach to Paratethyan stratigraphy". Terra Nova. 29 (5): 273–281. Bibcode:2017TeNov..29..273S. doi:10.1111/ter.12273. S2CID 134172069.
  8. ^ Bartol, M.; Mikuž, V.; Horvat, A. (15 January 2014). "Palaeontological evidence of communication between the Central Paratethys and the Mediterranean in the late Badenian/early Serravalian". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 394: 144–157. Bibcode:2014PPP...394..144B. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2013.12.009.
  9. ^ Rögl, F. "Palaeogeographic considerations for Mediterranean and Paratethys seaways (Oligocene to Miocene)". Annalen des Naturhistorischen Museums in Wien. 99: 279–310.
  10. ^ De Leeuw, A.; Bukowski, K.; Krijgsman, W.; Kuiper, K.F. (August 1, 2010). "Age of the Badenian salinity crisis; impact of Miocene climate variability on the circum-Mediterranean region". Geology. 38 (8): 715–718. Bibcode:2010Geo....38..715D. doi:10.1130/G30982.1.
  11. ^ Palcu, Dan Valentin; Patina, Irina Stanislavovna; Șandric, Ionuț; Lazarev, Sergei; Vasiliev, Iuliana; Stoica, Marius; Krijgsman, Wout (2021). "Late Miocene megalake regressions in Eurasia" (PDF). Scientific Reports. 11 (1): 11471. Bibcode:2021NatSR..1111471P. doi:10.1038/s41598-021-91001-z. PMC 8169904. PMID 34075146. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  12. ^ Meulebrouck, Stephan van. "Paratethys: The largest lake the Earth has ever seen". phys.org. Retrieved 2023-12-27.
  13. ^ Braig, Florian; Haug, Carolin; Haug, Joachim T. (2023-12-22). "Diversification events of the shield morphology in shore crabs and their relatives through development and time". Palaeontologia Electronica. 26 (3): 1–23. doi:10.26879/1305. ISSN 1094-8074.

Further reading edit

  • Stampfli, G.M.; Borel, G.D. (2004). "The TRANSMED Transects in Space and Time: Constraints on the Paleotectonic Evolution of the Mediterranean Domain". In Cavazza W.; Roure F.; Spakman W.; Stampfli G.M.; Ziegler P (eds.). The TRANSMED Atlas: the Mediterranean Region from Crust to Mantle. Springer Verlag. ISBN 3-540-22181-6.

External links edit

  • Vakarcs, G.; Magyar, I. "Freshened seas or inland lakes: eustacy and history of the Paratethys".
  • Stampfli, Gérard. . University of Lausanne. Archived from the original on 2012-01-08.

paratethys, ocean, realm, just, large, shallow, inland, that, stretched, from, region, north, alps, over, central, europe, aral, central, asia, palaeogeographical, reorganization, tethys, region, during, paleogene, from, connected, tethys, configuration, durin. The Paratethys sea Paratethys ocean Paratethys realm or just Paratethys was a large shallow inland sea that stretched from the region north of the Alps over Central Europe to the Aral Sea in Central Asia Palaeogeographical reorganization of the Tethys Paratethys region during the Paleogene from a connected Tethys configuration during the early Eocene above to a fragmented and restricted Paratethys region configuration during the Oligocene below Note the loss of deep water connections between the Indian Ocean region and the Mediterranean the complete loss of Indian Arctic Ocean connections and the closure of most of the Eocene seaways in the Oligocene time 1 Megafaunal diversity of the Paratethys megalake included cetaceans and pinnipeds most notably the Cetotherium riabinini went thorough a presumed insular dwarfism Paratethys was peculiar due to its paleogeography it consisted of a series of deep basins formed during the Oxfordian stage of the Late Jurassic as an extension of the rift that formed the Central Atlantic Ocean These basins were connected with each other and the global ocean by narrow and shallow seaways that often limited water exchange and caused widespread long term anoxia 1 Paratethys was at times reconnected with the Tethys or its successors the Mediterranean Sea or the Indian Ocean during the Oligocene and the early and middle Miocene times but at the onset of the late Miocene epoch the tectonically trapped sea turned into a megalake from the eastern Alps to what is now Kazakhstan 2 From the Pliocene epoch onward after 5 million years ago Paratethys became progressively shallower Today s Black Sea Caspian Sea Aral Sea Lake Urmia Namak Lake and others are remnants of the Paratethys Sea Paratethys formed about 34 Mya million years ago at the beginning of the Oligocene epoch 3 when the northern region of the Tethys Ocean Peri Tethys was separated from the Mediterranean region of the Tethys realm due to the formation of the Alps Carpathians Dinarides Taurus and Elburz mountains During the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods this part of Eurasia was covered by shallow seas that formed the northern margins of the Tethys Ocean However because Anatolia the southern boundary of the Paleo Tethys Ocean is a part of the original continent of Cimmeria the last remnant of the Paleo Tethys might be oceanic crust under the Black Sea The Tethys Ocean formed between Laurasia Eurasia and North America and Gondwana Africa India Antarctica Australia and South America when the supercontinent Pangaea broke up during the Triassic 200 million years ago Contents 1 Name and research 2 Palaeogeographic evolution 2 1 Anoxic Giant 2 2 Short lived open seas 2 3 Salt Giants 2 4 Megalake 2 5 After Paratethys 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksName and research editThe name Paratethys was first used by Vladimir Laskarev in 1924 4 Laskarev s definition included only fossils and sedimentary strata from the sea of the Neogene system This definition was later adjusted also to include the Oligocene series The existence of a separate water body in these periods was deduced from the fossil fauna including mollusks fish and ostracods In periods in which the Paratethys or parts of it were separated from each other or from other oceans a separate fauna developed which is found in sedimentary deposits In this way the paleogeographical development of the Paratethys can be studied Laskerev s description of the Paratethys was anticipated much earlier by Sir Roderick Murchison in chapter 13 of his 1845 book 5 One of the key characteristics of the Paratethys realm that is differentiating it from the Tethys Ocean is the widespread development of endemic fauna adapted to fresh and brackish waters like those that still exist in recent waters of the Caspian Sea This distinctive fauna in which univalves of freshwater origin such as Limnex and Neritinex are associated with forms of Cardiacae and Mytili common to partially saline or brackish waters makes the geologic records from Paratethys particularly difficult to correlate with those from other oceans or seas because their faunas evolved separately at times Stratigraphers of the Paratethys therefore have their own sets of stratigraphic stages which are still used as alternatives for the official geologic timescale of the ICS Palaeogeographic evolution editThe Paratethys spread over a large area in Central Europe and western Asia In the west it included in some stages the Molasse basin north of the Alps the Vienna Basin the Outer Carpathian Basin the Pannonian Basin and further east to the basin of the current Black Sea and the Caspian Sea until the current position of the Aral Sea Anoxic Giant edit The boundary between the Eocene and Oligocene epochs was characterized by a big drop of the global eustatic sea level and sudden steep cooling of global climates At the same time the Alpine orogeny a tectonic phase by which the Alps Carpathians Dinarides Taurus Elburz and many other mountain chains along the southern rim of Eurasia were formed The combination of a drop in sea level and tectonic uplift resulted in the partial disconnection of the Tethys and Paratethys domains Due to poor connectivity with the global ocean the Paratethys realm became stratified and turned into a giant anoxic sea The western and central Paratethys basins experienced intense tectonic activity and anoxia during the Oligocene and early Miocene and became filled with sediments Local gypsum and salt evaporitic basins formed in the East Carpathian region during the early Miocene The Eastern Paratethys basin holding most of the water of Paratethys remained anoxic for almost 20 million years 35 15 Mya and during this time Paratethys acted as an enormous carbon sink 1 trapping organic matter in its sediments The Paratethys anoxia was shut down 6 during the middle Miocene some 15 million years ago when a widespread marine transgression known as the Badenian Flooding improved connections with the global ocean and triggered the ventilation of the deep waters of Paratethys 7 Short lived open seas edit After the Badenian Flooding in the middle Miocene Paratethys was characterized by open marine environments Brackish and lacustrine basins turned into ventilated seas Rich marine fauna containing sharks e g megalodon corals marine mammals foraminifera and nanoplankton spread throughout Paratethys from the neighbouring Mediterranean region probably via the Trans Tethyan Corridor an ancient sea strait located in modern Slovenia 8 Salt Giants edit The open marine environments of Paratethys were short lived and halfway through the middle Miocene progressive uplift of the central European mountain ranges and a eustatic drop isolated Paratethys from the global ocean triggering a salinity crisis in Central Paratethys The Badenian Salinity Crisis 9 spanned between 13 8 and 13 4 Mya 10 Thick evaporitic beds salt and gypsum formed in the Outer Carpathians Transylvanian and Pannonian basins Salt mines extract this middle Miocene salt in Transylvania Turda Ocna Mures Ocna Sibiului and Praid in the Eastern and Carpathians Wieliczka Bochnia Cacica and Slanic Prahova and Ocnele Mari in the Southern Carpathians but evaporites are also present in areas west of the Carpathians Maramureș eastern Slovakia Solivar mine near Presov and to a lesser extent in the Pannonian depression in central Hungary Megalake edit Some 12 million years ago slightly before the onset of the late Miocene the ancient sea transformed into a megalake that covered more than 2 8 million square kilometers from the eastern Alps to what is now Kazakhstan and characterized by salinities generally ranging between 12 and 14 During its five million year lifetime the megalake was home to many species found nowhere else including molluscs and ostracods as well as miniature versions of whales dolphins and seals 2 11 In 2023 Guinness World Records named this lake the largest in earth s history 12 Near the end of the Miocene an event known as the Khersonian crisis marked by rapidly fluctuating environmental factors and sea levels wiped out much of the unique fish fauna of this megalake 13 After Paratethys edit When parts of the Mediterranean fell dry during the Messinian salinity crisis about 6 million years ago there were phases when Paratethys water flowed into the deep Mediterranean basins During the Pliocene epoch 5 33 to 2 58 million years ago the former Paratethys was divided into a couple of inland seas that were at times completely separated from each other An example was the Pannonian Sea a brackish sea in the Pannonian Basin Many of these would disappear before the start of the Pleistocene At present only the Black Sea Caspian Sea and the Aral Sea remain of what was once a vast inland sea See also edit nbsp Oceans portalCaspian Depression Low lying flatland region encompassing the northern part of the Caspian Sea Piemont Liguria Ocean Former piece of oceanic crust that is seen as part of the Tethys Ocean Zanclean flood Theoretical refilling of the Mediterranean Sea between the Miocene and Pliocene Epochs Paleo Tethys Ocean Ocean on the margin of Gondwana between the Middle Cambrian and Late TriassicReferences edit a b c Palcu D V Krijgsman W 2023 The dire straits of Paratethys gateways to the anoxic giant of Eurasia Geological Society London Special Publications 523 1 111 139 Bibcode 2023GSLSP 523 73P doi 10 1144 SP523 2021 73 S2CID 245054442 a b Perkins Sid June 4 2021 The rise and fall of the world s largest lake sciencemag org Retrieved 6 June 2021 Stampfli Gerard 155 Ma Late Oxfordian an M25 PDF University of Lausanne Archived from the original PDF on 2012 01 13 Laskarev V 1924 Sur les equivalents du Sarmatien superieur en Serbie In Vujevic P ed Recueil de Travaux Offert a M Jovan Cvijic par ses Amis et Collaborateurs Beograd Drzhavna Shtamparija pp 73 85 OCLC 760139740 Murchison Roderick Impey de Verneuil P E von Keyserling A 1845 On the Geology of Russia in Europe and the Ural Mountains Vol 1 London John Murray pp 297 323 Palcu D V Popov S V Golovina L Kuiper K F Liu S Krijgsman W March 2019 The shutdown of an anoxic giant Magnetostratigraphic dating of the end of the Maikop Sea Gondwana Research 67 82 100 Bibcode 2019GondR 67 82P doi 10 1016 j gr 2018 09 011 hdl 1871 1 9f40acfe 86d3 44da bf25 832c79f4c22f S2CID 134737570 Sant K Palcu D V Mandic O Krijgsman W 2017 Changing seas in the Early Middle Miocene of Central Europe a Mediterranean approach to Paratethyan stratigraphy Terra Nova 29 5 273 281 Bibcode 2017TeNov 29 273S doi 10 1111 ter 12273 S2CID 134172069 Bartol M Mikuz V Horvat A 15 January 2014 Palaeontological evidence of communication between the Central Paratethys and the Mediterranean in the late Badenian early Serravalian Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 394 144 157 Bibcode 2014PPP 394 144B doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2013 12 009 Rogl F Palaeogeographic considerations for Mediterranean and Paratethys seaways Oligocene to Miocene Annalen des Naturhistorischen Museums in Wien 99 279 310 De Leeuw A Bukowski K Krijgsman W Kuiper K F August 1 2010 Age of the Badenian salinity crisis impact of Miocene climate variability on the circum Mediterranean region Geology 38 8 715 718 Bibcode 2010Geo 38 715D doi 10 1130 G30982 1 Palcu Dan Valentin Patina Irina Stanislavovna Șandric Ionuț Lazarev Sergei Vasiliev Iuliana Stoica Marius Krijgsman Wout 2021 Late Miocene megalake regressions in Eurasia PDF Scientific Reports 11 1 11471 Bibcode 2021NatSR 1111471P doi 10 1038 s41598 021 91001 z PMC 8169904 PMID 34075146 Retrieved 6 June 2021 Meulebrouck Stephan van Paratethys The largest lake the Earth has ever seen phys org Retrieved 2023 12 27 Braig Florian Haug Carolin Haug Joachim T 2023 12 22 Diversification events of the shield morphology in shore crabs and their relatives through development and time Palaeontologia Electronica 26 3 1 23 doi 10 26879 1305 ISSN 1094 8074 Further reading editStampfli G M Borel G D 2004 The TRANSMED Transects in Space and Time Constraints on the Paleotectonic Evolution of the Mediterranean Domain In Cavazza W Roure F Spakman W Stampfli G M Ziegler P eds The TRANSMED Atlas the Mediterranean Region from Crust to Mantle Springer Verlag ISBN 3 540 22181 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paratethys Ocean Vakarcs G Magyar I Freshened seas or inland lakes eustacy and history of the Paratethys Stampfli Gerard Reconstructions paleotectoniques globales University of Lausanne Archived from the original on 2012 01 08 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paratethys amp oldid 1196002860, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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