TY - JOUR
T1 - A two-step process for the reflooding of the Mediterranean after the Messinian Salinity Crisis
AU - Bache, François
AU - Popescu, Speranta Maria
AU - Rabineau, Marina
AU - Gorini, Christian
AU - Suc, Jean Pierre
AU - Clauzon, Georges
AU - Olivet, Jean Louis
AU - Rubino, Jean Loup
AU - Melinte-Dobrinescu, Mihaela Carmen
AU - Estrada, Ferran
AU - Londeix, Laurent
AU - Armijo, Rolando
AU - Meyer, Bertrand
AU - Jolivet, Laurent
AU - Jouannic, Gwénaël
AU - Leroux, Estelle
AU - Aslanian, Daniel
AU - Reis, Antonio Tadeu Dos
AU - Mocochain, Ludovic
AU - Dumurdžanov, Nikola
AU - Zagorchev, Ivan
AU - Lesić, Vesna
AU - Tomić, Dragana
AU - Namik Çaǧatay, M.
AU - Brun, Jean Pierre
AU - Sokoutis, Dimitrios
AU - Csato, Istvan
AU - Ucarkus, Gülsen
AU - Çakir, Ziyadin
PY - 2012/4
Y1 - 2012/4
N2 - The Messinian Salinity Crisis is well known to have resulted from a significant drop of the Mediterranean sea level. Considering both onshore and offshore observations, the subsequent reflooding is generally thought to have been very sudden. We present here offshore seismic evidence from the Gulf of Lions and re-visited onshore data from Italy and Turkey that lead to a new concept of a two-step reflooding of the Mediterranean Basin after the Messinian Salinity Crisis. The refilling was first moderate and relatively slow accompanied by transgressive ravinement, and later on very rapid, preserving the subaerial Messinian Erosional Surface. The amplitude of these two successive rises of sea level has been estimated at ≤500 m for the first rise and 600-900 m for the second rise. Evaporites from the central Mediterranean basins appear to have been deposited principally at the beginning of the first step of reflooding. After the second step, which preceeded the Zanclean Global Stratotype Section and Point, successive connections with the Paratethyan Dacic Basin, then the Adriatic foredeep, and finally the Euxinian Basin occurred, as a consequence of the continued global rise in sea level. A complex morphology with sills and sub-basins led to diachronous events such as the so-called 'Lago Mare'.This study helps to distinguish events that were synchronous over the entire Mediterranean realm, such as the two-step reflooding, from those that were more local and diachronous. In addition, the shoreline that marks the transition between these two steps of reflooding in the Provence Basin provides a remarkable palaeogeographical marker for subsidence studies.
AB - The Messinian Salinity Crisis is well known to have resulted from a significant drop of the Mediterranean sea level. Considering both onshore and offshore observations, the subsequent reflooding is generally thought to have been very sudden. We present here offshore seismic evidence from the Gulf of Lions and re-visited onshore data from Italy and Turkey that lead to a new concept of a two-step reflooding of the Mediterranean Basin after the Messinian Salinity Crisis. The refilling was first moderate and relatively slow accompanied by transgressive ravinement, and later on very rapid, preserving the subaerial Messinian Erosional Surface. The amplitude of these two successive rises of sea level has been estimated at ≤500 m for the first rise and 600-900 m for the second rise. Evaporites from the central Mediterranean basins appear to have been deposited principally at the beginning of the first step of reflooding. After the second step, which preceeded the Zanclean Global Stratotype Section and Point, successive connections with the Paratethyan Dacic Basin, then the Adriatic foredeep, and finally the Euxinian Basin occurred, as a consequence of the continued global rise in sea level. A complex morphology with sills and sub-basins led to diachronous events such as the so-called 'Lago Mare'.This study helps to distinguish events that were synchronous over the entire Mediterranean realm, such as the two-step reflooding, from those that were more local and diachronous. In addition, the shoreline that marks the transition between these two steps of reflooding in the Provence Basin provides a remarkable palaeogeographical marker for subsidence studies.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84857779019&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/j.1365-2117.2011.00521.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1365-2117.2011.00521.x
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84857779019
SN - 0950-091X
VL - 24
SP - 125
EP - 153
JO - Basin Research
JF - Basin Research
IS - 2
ER -