Volume 26, Issue No. 1, 2001
ORIGIN AND EVOLUTION OF A CARPATHIAN TRIPLE JUNCTION
Haralambie Savu*
* Geological Institute of Romania, 1 Caransebes St., 78344 Bucharest 32, Romania.
The Carpathian triple
junction evolved within an area including the actual Carpathian bend zone
and North Dobrogea from Romania. It occurred between the three tectonic
plates shown in Fig. 1, due to a thermo-tectonic process, at the beginning
of Triassic and had a long evolution. This triple junction inherited a
Paleozoic almost similar structure. Within its three branches, extending
approximately along the actual East Carpathians, South Carpathians and
North Dobrogea (Fig. 1), a rifting process was very active, favouring the
manifestation of an intra-plate bimodal volcanism. The three branches which
met within the Vrancea region, had a common evolution as incipient large
rifts or epicontinental basins, from the Lower Triassic up to the Liassic,
when the Carpathian Ocean opened (Fig. 2), after the Early Kimmerian movements.
It opened along the Carpathian branches, while the North Dobrogean one
was abandoned as a failed branch (aulacogen). Within this ocean zone an
ocean crust was generated, that was dismembered by subduction and obduction
processes. The ocean opening dismembered the triple junction initial branches
into three separate segments. Due to the subduction process a foredeep
occurred along the Carpathian branches, within which sedimentary deposits,
including island arc volcanics, accumulated from the Upper Jurassic up
to Neogene. These formations were folded and thrust during several Alpine
orogenic phases. The resulting nappes were overthrust toward the foreland,
that included the North Dobrogean aulacogen, too. Tertiary fractures affected
also the triple junction structures, especially the post-ocean ones, contributing
to their dismembering.