<b>Current understanding of the Sava Zone of the Balkans: a magmatic perspective </b>

<p dir="ltr">The Sava Zone (SZ) forms a key tectonic boundary between Europe-derived and Adria-derived continental units in the central Balkans and hosts a discontinuous belt of Late Cretaceous volcanic and plutonic rocks whose geodynamic significance remains strongly debated. Tradit...

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Հիմնական հեղինակ: Kristijan Sokol (22687811) (author)
Այլ հեղինակներ: Dejan Prelević (14171463) (author)
Հրապարակվել է: 2025
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author Kristijan Sokol (22687811)
author2 Dejan Prelević (14171463)
author2_role author
author_facet Kristijan Sokol (22687811)
Dejan Prelević (14171463)
author_role author
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Kristijan Sokol (22687811)
Dejan Prelević (14171463)
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2025-11-26T08:08:43Z
dc.identifier.none.fl_str_mv 10.6084/m9.figshare.30719231.v1
dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/_b_Current_understanding_of_the_Sava_Zone_of_the_Balkans_a_magmatic_perspective_b_/30719231
dc.rights.none.fl_str_mv CC BY 4.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Igneous and metamorphic petrology
Sava Zone
Rhyolite
Basalt
Granite
Upper Cretaceous magmatism
Europe
Adria
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv <b>Current understanding of the Sava Zone of the Balkans: a magmatic perspective </b>
dc.type.none.fl_str_mv Dataset
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
dataset
description <p dir="ltr">The Sava Zone (SZ) forms a key tectonic boundary between Europe-derived and Adria-derived continental units in the central Balkans and hosts a discontinuous belt of Late Cretaceous volcanic and plutonic rocks whose geodynamic significance remains strongly debated. Traditional interpretations viewed this belt as the youngest remnant of the Neotethyan Ocean, implying an oceanic environment and ophiolitic affinities. However, recent studies challenge this interpretation, suggesting that much of the SZ magmatism has intracontinental origins. This revised perspective indicates that these magmatic rocks may not be associated with oceanic subduction, as previously thought, but rather with the tectono-magmatic evolution of the European (Tisza-Dacia) and Adria plates. </p><p dir="ltr">In this review we synthesize available petrological, geochemical, and geochronological data from all major localities where Upper Cretaceous magmatic rocks occur along the broader area of Sava Zone. Magmatic activity, constrained to ca. 87–76 Ma, spans tholeiitic to alkaline basalts and compositionally diverse felsic rocks. Two contrasting magmatic domains are evident. Adria-side localities host tholeiitic to transitional basalts with N- to E-MORB–like signatures derived from a relatively depleted spinel-bearing mantle. European-side occurrences contain enriched within-plate basalts and lamprophyres approaching OIB-like characteristics, requiring melting of a metasomatized lithospheric mantle extending into the garnet–spinel transition field. In our view, this asymmetry reflects lateral mantle heterogeneity rather than fundamentally different tectonic environments. The acidic rocks occurring within the European-affinity blocks display considerably greater diversity, including A1, A2, and S-type granitoid compositions, whereas the acidic rocks in the Dinarides (Adriatic plate) are predominantly restricted to the A2 subtype.</p><p dir="ltr">Regionally, Sava Zone magmatism was coeval with - but genetically distinct from - the Apuseni–Banat-Timok-Sredna Gora magmatic and metallogenic belt. Whereas the latter may have formed with or without invoking an actively subducting oceanic domain (e.g., the proposed “Sava Ocean”), the Sava Zone magmas in our view reflect lithospheric thinning, transtension, and mantle upwelling driven by slab rollback. These findings indicate that the Sava Zone records the transition from subduction-driven to post-collisional tectonics during the final reorganization of the Neotethyan margin. We therefore propose redefining this system as part of the Central Balkan Late Cretaceous Magmatic Province - an intracontinental belt marking the waning stages of Tethyan closure.</p>
eu_rights_str_mv openAccess
id Manara_05f5e6d990d9b8c908bf1c69beb7978b
identifier_str_mv 10.6084/m9.figshare.30719231.v1
network_acronym_str Manara
network_name_str ManaraRepo
oai_identifier_str oai:figshare.com:article/30719231
publishDate 2025
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rights_invalid_str_mv CC BY 4.0
spelling <b>Current understanding of the Sava Zone of the Balkans: a magmatic perspective </b>Kristijan Sokol (22687811)Dejan Prelević (14171463)Igneous and metamorphic petrologySava ZoneRhyoliteBasaltGraniteUpper Cretaceous magmatismEuropeAdria<p dir="ltr">The Sava Zone (SZ) forms a key tectonic boundary between Europe-derived and Adria-derived continental units in the central Balkans and hosts a discontinuous belt of Late Cretaceous volcanic and plutonic rocks whose geodynamic significance remains strongly debated. Traditional interpretations viewed this belt as the youngest remnant of the Neotethyan Ocean, implying an oceanic environment and ophiolitic affinities. However, recent studies challenge this interpretation, suggesting that much of the SZ magmatism has intracontinental origins. This revised perspective indicates that these magmatic rocks may not be associated with oceanic subduction, as previously thought, but rather with the tectono-magmatic evolution of the European (Tisza-Dacia) and Adria plates. </p><p dir="ltr">In this review we synthesize available petrological, geochemical, and geochronological data from all major localities where Upper Cretaceous magmatic rocks occur along the broader area of Sava Zone. Magmatic activity, constrained to ca. 87–76 Ma, spans tholeiitic to alkaline basalts and compositionally diverse felsic rocks. Two contrasting magmatic domains are evident. Adria-side localities host tholeiitic to transitional basalts with N- to E-MORB–like signatures derived from a relatively depleted spinel-bearing mantle. European-side occurrences contain enriched within-plate basalts and lamprophyres approaching OIB-like characteristics, requiring melting of a metasomatized lithospheric mantle extending into the garnet–spinel transition field. In our view, this asymmetry reflects lateral mantle heterogeneity rather than fundamentally different tectonic environments. The acidic rocks occurring within the European-affinity blocks display considerably greater diversity, including A1, A2, and S-type granitoid compositions, whereas the acidic rocks in the Dinarides (Adriatic plate) are predominantly restricted to the A2 subtype.</p><p dir="ltr">Regionally, Sava Zone magmatism was coeval with - but genetically distinct from - the Apuseni–Banat-Timok-Sredna Gora magmatic and metallogenic belt. Whereas the latter may have formed with or without invoking an actively subducting oceanic domain (e.g., the proposed “Sava Ocean”), the Sava Zone magmas in our view reflect lithospheric thinning, transtension, and mantle upwelling driven by slab rollback. These findings indicate that the Sava Zone records the transition from subduction-driven to post-collisional tectonics during the final reorganization of the Neotethyan margin. We therefore propose redefining this system as part of the Central Balkan Late Cretaceous Magmatic Province - an intracontinental belt marking the waning stages of Tethyan closure.</p>2025-11-26T08:08:43ZDatasetinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersiondataset10.6084/m9.figshare.30719231.v1https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/_b_Current_understanding_of_the_Sava_Zone_of_the_Balkans_a_magmatic_perspective_b_/30719231CC BY 4.0info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessoai:figshare.com:article/307192312025-11-26T08:08:43Z
spellingShingle <b>Current understanding of the Sava Zone of the Balkans: a magmatic perspective </b>
Kristijan Sokol (22687811)
Igneous and metamorphic petrology
Sava Zone
Rhyolite
Basalt
Granite
Upper Cretaceous magmatism
Europe
Adria
status_str publishedVersion
title <b>Current understanding of the Sava Zone of the Balkans: a magmatic perspective </b>
title_full <b>Current understanding of the Sava Zone of the Balkans: a magmatic perspective </b>
title_fullStr <b>Current understanding of the Sava Zone of the Balkans: a magmatic perspective </b>
title_full_unstemmed <b>Current understanding of the Sava Zone of the Balkans: a magmatic perspective </b>
title_short <b>Current understanding of the Sava Zone of the Balkans: a magmatic perspective </b>
title_sort <b>Current understanding of the Sava Zone of the Balkans: a magmatic perspective </b>
topic Igneous and metamorphic petrology
Sava Zone
Rhyolite
Basalt
Granite
Upper Cretaceous magmatism
Europe
Adria