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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Understanding Paleomagnetic Rotations in Sicily: Thrust Versus Strike-Slip Tectonics

Catalina Hernandez-morenoFabio SperanzaAttilio SulliGiuseppe AvelloneMaurizio Gasparo MorticelliEnrico Di StefanoMauro Agate

subject

Paleomagnetism010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSettore GEO/03 - Geologia StrutturalepaleomagnetismThrust010502 geochemistry & geophysicsStrike-slip tectonicsrotation01 natural sciencesthrust tectonicThrust tectonicsGeophysicsstrike-slip tectonicGeochemistry and PetrologySicilyGeophysicSeismologyGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciences

description

The paleomagnetic investigation of the western Sicily Maghrebian belt has revealed since the 1970s that large clockwise rotations up to 140° with respect to the Hyblean-African foreland occurred synchronous with Tertiary shortening of the chain. The observation that rotations decrease stepwise from internal to external tectono-stratigraphic units led in the 1990s to a widely accepted model postulating that rotational thrust-sheet emplaced during forward orogenic propagation. More recently, other authors suggested that clockwise rotations from Sicily are conversely the result of late orogenic dextral strike-slip tectonics. Here we report on a paleomagnetic investigation of 30 Jurassic-Eocene sedimentary sites sampled mainly across the WNW-ESE Mt. Kumeta and Rocca Busambra ridges (Trapanese Unit), both bounded to the north by high-angle reverse faults with dextral strike-slip components. We find rotations of 110°–120° at faults of northern ridge margins, which decrease to 80°–90° at ~200 m to the south and rise again moving further south. Thus, an excess rotation of 20°–40° due to dextral-strike-slip shear is annulled to the regional rotational background of the Trapanese Unit at only 200 m from fault traces, translating to paleomagnetically calculated strike-slip offsets not exceeding 600 m. Further north, seven sites sampled in the Imerese Unit, tectonically stacked above the Trapanese Unit, yield a ~130° rotation. Thus, our data confirm that CW rotations in Sicily are predominantly related to thrust-sheet emplacement. Strike-slip tectonics has very limited relevance and gives local rotations that fade out at only 200 m from fault planes.

https://doi.org/10.1002/2017tc004815