The Paril Formation (South Pirin and Slavyanka Mountains,
southwestern Bulgaria) and the
Prodromos Formation (Orvilos and Menikion Mountains, northern
Greece) consist of breccia and olistostrome
built up predominantly of marble fragments from the Precambrian
Dobrostan Marble Formation
(Bulgaria) and its equivalent Bos-Dag Marble Formation (Greece).
The breccia and olistostrome are
interbedded with thin layers of calcarenites (with occasional
marble pebbles), siltstones, sandstones and
limestones. The Paril and Prodromos formations unconformably
cover the Precambrian marbles, and are
themselves covered unconformably by Miocene and Pliocene
sediments (Nevrokop Formation). The rocks
of the Paril Formation are intruded by the Palaeogene (Late
Eocene–Early Oligocene) Teshovo granitoid
pluton, and are deformed and preserved in the two limbs of a
Palaeogene anticline cored by the Teshovo pluton
(Teshovo anticline). The Palaeocene–Middle Eocene age of
the formations is based on these contact
relations, and on occasional finds of Tertiary pollen, as well
as on correlations with similar formations of the
Laki (Kroumovgrad) Group throughout the Rhodope region.
The presence of Palaeogene sediments within the pre-Palaeogene
Pirin–Pangaion structural zone invalidates
the concept of a ‘Rhodope metamorphic core
complex’ that supposedly has undergone Palaeogene
amphibolite-facies regional metamorphism, and afterwards has
been exhumed by rapid crustal extension in
Late Oligocene–Miocene times along a regional detachment
surface. Other Palaeogene formations of pre-Priabonian
(Middle Eocene and/or Bartonian) or earliest Priabonian age
occur at the base of the Palaeogene
sections in the Mesta graben complex (Dobrinishka Formation)
and the Padesh basin (Souhostrel and
Komatinitsa formations). The deposition of coarse continental
sediments grading into marine formations
(Laki or Kroumovgrad Group) in the Rhodope region at the
beginning of the Palaeogene Period marks the
first intense fragmentation of the mid- to late Cretaceous
orogen, in particular, of the thickened body of the
Morava-Rhodope structural zone situated to the south of the
Srednogorie zone. The Srednogorie zone itself
was folded and uplifted in Late Cretaceous time, thus dividing
Palaeocene–Middle Eocene flysch of the
Louda Kamchiya trough to the north, from the newly formed East
Rhodope–West Thrace depression to the south.