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Featured researches published by Cengiz Okuyucu.


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2006

Stratigraphy, correlations and palaeogeography of Palaeozoic terranes of Bulgaria and NW Turkey: a review of recent data

S. Yanev; Mehmet Cemal Göncüoğlu; Ibrahim Gedik; Iskra Lakova; Iliana Boncheva; Valeri Sachanski; Cengiz Okuyucu; N. Özgül; E. Timur; Y. Maliakov; G. Saydam

Abstract Within the Alpine tectonic units SE of the European Variscan Orogenic Belt in Bulgaria and NW Turkey several crustal blocks are identified. Although their contact relations with surrounding units are obscured by Alpine events, the differences in the succession of events, stratigraphy, sedimentology and palaeobiogeographical distribution within them permits recognition of the Moesian, Balkan, Istanbul and Zonguldak Terranes. The Moesian terrane corresponds to the pre-Variscan Palaeozoic and Neoproterozoic rocks of the Moesian microplate in north Bulgaria and south Romania. The Balkan Terrane in Bulgaria incorporates Neoproteozoic and Palaeozoic sequences in the Western Balkanides (part of the Carpathian-Balkan orogen) and another three allochthonous units (Kraishte, Central Balkanides and Strandzhides). In NW Anatolia in Turkey, the Caledonian basement and Ordovician to Carboniferous sedimentary succession are divided into the Istanbul Terrane and the Zonguldak Terrane. With the exception of the Moesian Terrane in the Bulgarian area, they all comprise a Cadomian basement with relicts of oceanic lithosphere, volcanic arc and a continental crust of unknown affinity. Based on characteristic features within their Palaeozoic successions, there terranes are correlated with the main terrane assemblages in Central and Eastern Europe. It is suggested that they all are of peri-Gondwanan origin but behaved independently while drifting towards Laurussia. During the Early Devonian the Zonguldak Terrane docked to Baltica, whereas the others were still at similar palaeolatitudes to the Central European terranes (e.g. Saxo-Thuringian). This was followed by the successive accretion of the Moesian Terrane to Laurussia along the Rhenohercynian suture at the end of Devonian-Early Carboniferous and of the Balkan and Istanbul Terranes the Early and Late Carboniferous.


Journal of Micropalaeontology | 2007

Fusulinid Foraminifera of the Bashkirian-Moscovian boundary in the eastern Taurides, southern Turkey

Aleksandra V. Dzhenchuraeva; Cengiz Okuyucu

Fusulinid faunas of the Pennsylvanian (Bashkirian–Moscovian) deposits of the Siyah Aladag Nappe were investigated from the Kuzuoluk section located in the eastern Taurides. The section is represented by grey, occasionally laminated, algal and fusulinid-rich limestones. The foraminiferal faunas of the Kuzuoluk section are very diverse and abundant which allows identification of the Bashkirian–Moscovian boundary by index-species such as Verella spicata and Aljutovella aljutovica. Other key taxa in the Bashkirian–Moscovian interval include Pseudostaffella grandis and Staffellaeformes staffellaeformis (Bashkirian Stage, upper part of the Lower Substage), Ozawainella pararhomboidalis and Staffellaeformes bona (Bashkirian Stage, Upper Substage), Verella spicata (Bashkirian Stage, Upper Substage) and Aljutovella aljutovica Zones (Moscovian Stage, Lower Substage). The Bashkirian–Moscovian microfaunas from the Kuzuoluk section can be correlated with assemblages from Tien-Shan, the Southern Urals and the Russian Platform.


Geologica Carpathica | 2013

New age data from the tectonostratigraphic units of the Istranca “Massif” in NW Turkey: a correlation with SE Bulgaria

Yavuz Bedi; Emil Vasilev; Christo Dabovski; Alı Ergen; Cengiz Okuyucu; Adıl Doğan; U. Kagan Tekin; Daria Ivanova; Iliana Boncheva; Iskra Lakova; Valeri Sachanski; İsmaıl Kuşcu; Ercan Tuncay; D. Gülnur Demıray; Havva Soycan; M. Cemal Göncüoglu

Abstract The Istranca Crystalline Complex in NW Anatolia and SE Bulgaria includes structural units that differ in lithostratigraphy, metamorphism, age and structural position. They are collectively named as the “Istranca nappes” comprising from bottom to top the Sarpdere, Mahyadağ and Doğanköy Nappes. The Sarpdere Nappe consists of Lower Triassic arkosic metasandstones with slate interlayers, followed by Middle to Upper Triassic carbonates and an alternation of Upper Triassic clastics and carbonates. The Mahyadağ Nappe comprises a low-grade metamorphic Late Paleozoic- Triassic carbonate-siliciclastic sedimentary succession. The Doğanköy Nappe includes Precambrian?-Paleozoic metasediments, intruded by Late Carboniferous-Early Permian calc-alkaline granitoids. Its Triassic cover comprises metaclastics and metacarbonates. The Istranca nappes were juxtaposed at the end of the Triassic and transgressively covered by Lower Jurassic coarse clastics, followed above by Middle to Late Jurassic carbonates, black shales and carbonate-siliciclastic sedimentary succession. The phosphate concretions in black shales yielded radiolarian assemblages indicating Late Bajocian-Early Bathonian, Early Bathonian and Early Kimmeridgian ages. These nappes and their Jurassic cover are unconformably overlain by the Cenomanian-Santonian volcano-sedimentary successions intruded by Santonian-Campanian Dereköy-Demirköy intrusive suite. The preliminary data suggest that the Variscan basements of the Mahyadağ and Sarpdere Nappes were juxtaposed prior to the Triassic and overridden by the Doğanköy Nappe of possible Rhodopean origin from S to N during the Cimmerian compressional events


Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia (Research In Paleontology and Stratigraphy) | 1999

A NEW MULTIDISCUS ? SPECIES (FORAMINIFERA) FROM A FUSULINACEAN-RICH SUCCESSION ENCOMPASSING THE CARBONIFEROUS-PERMIAN BOUNDARY IN THE HADIM NAPPE (CENTRAL TAURUS, TURKEY)

Cengiz Okuyucu

The Hadim Nappe Carboniferous-Permian boundary and its fusulinacean-rich strata from the Catalkatran Tepe stratigraphic section were studied. The appearance of Sphaeroschwagerina sp. determines the Carboniferous-Permian boundary in this section. The presence of Pseudofusulina ? buzulukensis Dobrokhotova, Pseudofusulina parviflucta Zhou, Pseudofusulina hovunensis Davydov, Occidentoschwagerina (?) kosvaensis Echakov and Rugosofusulina stabilis Rauzer-Chernousova confirm the Asselian age. A new Multidiscus ? species, Multidiscus ? tauridiana n. sp. was discovered from the Early Permian (Asselian) of Turkey (Hadim Nappe, Central Taurus).


Journal of Systematic Palaeontology | 2017

Discovery of a long-term refuge for ostracods (Crustacea) after the end-Permian extinction: a unique Carnian (Late Triassic) fauna from the Mersin Mélange, southern Turkey

Marie-Béatrice Forel; U. Kagan Tekin; Cengiz Okuyucu; Yavuz Bedi; Sylvie Crasquin

The Mersin Mélange, located in southern Turkey north-west of the city of Mersin, includes blocks and tectonic slices of different origins. The Kilek section in the Mersin Mélange was sampled for a thorough examination of its lithology, biostratigraphy and fossil content. Two samples from the cherty limestone layers within the Huglu Tuffites at the top of the section yielded a rich silicified ostracod fauna of late Early Carnian (based on a two-fold Carnian subdivision) or middle Middle Carnian age (based on a three-fold Carnian subdivision), deposited in an open marine environment, in the outer platform-upper slope zone. We report 121 ostracod species belonging to 53 genera. Two new genera are described: Edithobairdia Forel gen. nov. and Gencella Forel gen. nov., as well as 16 new species: Acanthoscapha mersinella Forel sp. nov., Bairdia hugluensis Forel sp. nov., Acratia kollmanni Forel sp. nov., Citrella? carniana Forel sp. nov., Cytheropteron? schornikovi Forel sp. nov., Eucytherura lacerata Forel sp. nov., Gencella taurensis Forel sp. nov., Kerocythere dorsidenticulata Forel sp. nov., Kerocythere tricostata Forel sp. nov., Monoceratina praevulsaformis Forel sp. nov., Patellacythere tourkosella Forel sp. nov., Polycope kilekensis Forel sp. nov., Ptychobairdia praekristanae Forel sp. nov., Simeonella daginikella Forel sp. nov., Spinomicrocheilinella reliquiaella Forel sp. nov. and Triassocythere tavuscayiriensis Forel sp. nov. The diagnosis of Acratia goemoeryi Kozur is emended. The Kilek fauna retains primitive characteristics illustrated by the first known occurrence of Palaeocopida and Rectonariidae (typical Palaeozoic forms) in the Late Triassic, associated with typical Triassic–modern elements such as thick-shelled and ornamented Bairdiidae and diverse Cytheroidea known from the Middle and Late Triassic worldwide. The unique composition of Palaeozoic and Mesozoic taxa from the Kilek section illustrates unexpected long-term survival in a deep-sea refuge zone following the end-Permian extinction, and the diachronous character of the ostracod recovery in different environments. http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org.pub:662C3D5C–2B86–4D7B–BDB5–8F8B6A1AD1E7


Clay Minerals | 2016

Geological features and geochemical characteristics of Late Devonian–Early Carboniferous K-bentonites from northwestern Turkey

M.C. Göncüoğlu; A. Günal-Türkmenoğlu; Ömer Bozkaya; Ö. Ünlüce-Yücel; Cengiz Okuyucu; İsmail Ömer Yılmaz

Abstract Newly discovered K-bentonite beds, interstratified with limestones/dolomitic limestones of the Upper Devonian-Lower Carboniferous Yılanlı Formation, are exposed in the northwestern Black Sea region of Turkey, around Zonguldak and Bartın. K-bentonite samples collected from four different locations: the Gavurpınarı and Yılanlı Burnu quarries from the Bartın area, the Çimşir Çukurları quarry from the Şapça area, and the Güdüllü and Gökgöl highway tunnel section near Zonguldak city were investigated using optical microscopy,X-ray diffraction and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry in order to reveal their mineralogical and geochemical characteristics and understand their origin and evolution. The K-bentonites occur at different levels in the Yılanlı Formation as 2-40 cm-thick, greenish to yellowish beds cropping out several hundred metres along strike. Preliminary biostratigraphic data suggest that the protoliths of the Bartın (Gavurpınarı and Yılanlı Burnu) and Güdüllü K-bentonites were deposited at around the boundary between the Frasnian and Famennian, whereas those in the Şapça and Gökgöl sections are slightly younger (Devonian-Carboniferous boundary interval). The lithofacies types of the host carbonate rocks suggest an ‘epeiric’ shallow carbonate platform environment. Illite and mixed-layer illite-smectite were the major clay minerals in the K-bentonites. The K-bentonites from the Bartın area display a high degree of illitization and consist mainly of illite indicating high-grade diagenesis, whereas illite-smectite-rich samples from the Şapca and Gökgöl tunnel locations reflect relatively lower diagenetic conditions. According to their geochemical compositions, two groups of K-bentonites were distinguished, one with alkali basalt (Bartın area and Güdüllü locations) and one with trachyte affinities (Gökgöl tunnel and Şapça locations). Geochemical fingerprinting of K-bentonites by trace and rare earth element (REE) data suggest that tephras with alkali basalt composition have been derived by a source formed in a ‘continental back-arc’ setting, whereas the source of K-bentonites with trachytic precursors is related to ‘continental within-plate rifting’. An evaluation of the global Late Devonian and Devonian-Carboniferous volcanism suggests that the bentonite precursors may be related to late-Variscan magmatism in Laurussia.


Geological Magazine | 2017

Late Permian (Tatarian) fluvio-lacustrine successions in NW Anatolia (Zonguldak Terrane, Turkey): palaeogeographic implications

Cengiz Okuyucu; T Dimitrova; Mehmet Cemal Göncüoğlu; Ibrahim Gedik

Late Permian fluvio-lacustrine successions of the Cakraz Formation in the Zonguldak Terrane between the regions of Akcakoca and Eregli were investigated in order to describe the litho- and biostratigraphic properties and explain the depositional environment. The studied succession with black, dark-grey to greenish-grey shales, siltstones and limestones is named the Alapli Member to distinguish it from the classical red clastic successions, which are tentatively named the Eregli Member of the Cakraz Formation. The organic-rich black shales, mudstones and limestones of the Alapli Member yielded palynological assemblages suggesting a Lopingian (Tatarian) age. The lack of any marine macro- or microfossils, the fine-grained character of the lithofacies with abundant plant material and the association of poorly sorted conglomerates in the middle part of the succession indicate possible deposition in a broad range of fluvial and lacustrine environments. Successions of similar age and depositional environment are known from the East European Variscan Belt in Bulgaria and Romania. Common successions were also developed in actively extending shallow-marine platforms on the NW Palaeotethyan margin at the end of the Permian Period.


Geobios | 2010

Middle–late Asselian (Early Permian) fusulinid fauna from the post-Variscan cover in NW Anatolia (Turkey): Biostratigraphy and geological implications☆

Cengiz Okuyucu; Mehmet Cemal Göncüoğlu


Comptes Rendus Palevol | 2007

New Middle Permian foraminifers (Chitralinidae) from the Karakaya Complex, in northwestern Turkey

Cengiz Okuyucu


Journal of African Earth Sciences | 2016

Radiolarian biochronology of upper Anisian to upper Ladinian (Middle Triassic) blocks and tectonic slices of volcano-sedimentary successions in the Mersin Mélange, southern Turkey: New insights for the evolution of Neotethys

U. Kagan Tekin; Yavuz Bedi; Cengiz Okuyucu; M. Cemal Göncüoglu; Kaan Sayit

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Yavuz Bedi

General Directorate of Mineral Research and Exploration

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M. Cemal Göncüoglu

Middle East Technical University

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Mehmet Cemal Göncüoğlu

Middle East Technical University

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Valeri Sachanski

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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Ibrahim Gedik

General Directorate of Mineral Research and Exploration

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Kaan Sayit

Middle East Technical University

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Alı Ergen

General Directorate of Mineral Research and Exploration

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İsmail Ömer Yılmaz

Middle East Technical University

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