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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Europe
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Carpathians (1)
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Central Europe
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Hungary (2)
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Danube Delta (1)
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Danube Valley (6)
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Pannonian Basin (1)
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Southern Europe
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Serbia (1)
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illite (1)
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Primary terms
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Cenozoic
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Tertiary
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Neogene
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upper Miocene
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Pontian (1)
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Pliocene
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Cimmerian (1)
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Dacian (1)
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clay mineralogy (1)
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continental shelf (1)
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data processing (1)
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diagenesis (1)
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Europe
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Carpathians (1)
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Central Europe
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Hungary (2)
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Danube Delta (1)
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Danube Valley (6)
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Pannonian Basin (1)
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Southern Europe
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Balkan Mountains (1)
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Bulgaria (1)
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Romania (1)
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Serbia (1)
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Tisza River (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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sedimentary structures
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sedimentary structures
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planar bedding structures
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rhythmic bedding (1)
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sediments
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sediments
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Danube Valley
Abstract This paper provides analysis of the published materials on the occurrences of the Dacian and Cimmerian molluscs in the Danube River valley as well as the results of Pliocene sediments study based on core material of the boreholes drilled at the Black Sea Shelf east of the Danube River Delta. In the early Pontian time, the Dacian Basin was a large sub-basin of Paratethys which, due to an abrupt drop in sea level, separated into the Euxinian, Dacian and Caspian basins. At the end of the Bosphorus time, the discharge of the Dacian Basin waters into the Euxinian Basin formed a wide valley from the Galati-Reni region to the east through the Galati gateway. During the Cimmerian transgression, a vast bay existed on the site of the modern Danube Delta, from which mutual migrations of the Dacian and Cimmerian molluscs took place along the runoff valley. The cessation of runoff occurred during the regressive phase of the Late Cimmerian. The rhythmically bedded thick strata originated during the existence of the runoff valley. These strata were identified as the Pridanubian Formation (Suite). The cryptogenic form of Tulotoma Tulotoma ( =Viviparus ) ovidii nasonis (Bogachev) is characteristic of the lower and middle parts of the suite. The presence of the Dacian and Cimmerian molluscs in this suite became the basis for the correlation of sediments of the Dacian and Cimmerian regional stages. The Duabian molluscs were registered in the Cimmerian deposits of the Transcaucasus (the Duabian layers), Priazovye and the Kerch–Taman region. The migration of these molluscs took place during the regressive phases due to the circular current in the Euxinian Basin similar to the one existing in the Black Sea today. The Pliocene formation contains marine and continental deposits of the Lower and Upper Pliocene, which are represented by the Pridanubian Formation (Lower and Upper), Cimmerian deposits (non-subdivided Lower and Middle Cimmerian), Lower Kujalnician deposits, Upper Poration deposits, complex of red-coloured palaeosols (the Upper Miocene–Lower Pliocene non-subdivided). The formation of the Pliocene sediments on the Black Sea Shelf, east of the Danube Delta, was controlled by the inter-basin connectivity of the Eastern Paratethys.
Oil accumulation, regional groundwater flow, and inert gas risk in the southern Danube Basin, Hungary
Relations between surface and underground karst forms inferred from terrestrial laser scanning
Abstract This paper details methods that contribute towards solving the problem of the spatial relations between surface and underground karst morphology – relationships that are often unclear. The karst landforms studied in this context are karst valleys, through-caves and natural bridges. Two study sites are situated in the Carpatho-Balkan Mountains of eastern Serbia: the dry valley of the Radovanska Reka River on Mt Kučaj (together with the Pećura through-cave) and the Zamna Cave in the wider area of the Danube Gorge. The caves and the closest adjoining parts of the valleys were measured in detail using the terrestrial laser scanning method. The data obtained showed that some previous measurements at these locations, performed with classical traditional instruments, are insufficiently accurate and may lead to wrong conclusions.