Search results for "TECTONICS"
showing 10 items of 385 documents
Structural framework and crustal characteristics of the Sardinia Channel Alpine transect in the central Mediterranean
2000
Abstract The submerged area located between the Sardinia Channel and the western Sicily offshore has been investigated based on deep crustal and conventional seismic lines with the aim of illustrating the relationships between the crust and its overlying crystalline and sedimentary thrust wedge. Analyses of seismic attributes and reflector pattern, supported by dredge hauls, also provided data in areas where stratigraphic and lithologic control is absent. Crustal geometries, tectonic processes and timing of the deformation are discussed here. North of the Elimi chain (central Sardinia Channel) the reflecting body consists of superposed tectonic wedges of crystalline rocks and their Meso-Cen…
Characterisation of Mesozoic–Cenozoic deformations and palaeostress fields in the Central Constantinois, northeast Algeria
1998
Abstract Tectonic analysis in conjunction with the microtectonic study of Mesozoic–Cenozoic series of the Central Constantinois of Algeria are used to reconstruct the sequence of tectonic phases since Cretaceous times. The retrotectonic method used to marshal the microtectonic data makes it possible to distinguish deformations related to Mesozoic tectonic phases from those associated with Cenozoic pre- and post-thrust sheet phases. A N120°E extensional and a N180°E compressional phase are highlighted in Albian–Cenomanian and latest Maastrichtian times, respectively. The Cenozoic era is marked by a series of three compressional phases oriented N90°–120°E in the Late Eocene, and N20°–30°E and…
Shallow structures at the outer Calabrian accretionary wedge (NW Ionian Sea): new insights from recently migrated reflection data
2010
Terra Nova, 00, 000–000, 2010 Abstract Post-stack time migration of a set of seismic reflection profiles reveals details of the stratigraphic–structural setting of the outermost Calabrian accretionary wedge, in the NW sector of the Ionian Sea, with particular emphasis on the Messinian stratigraphy and the deformation style of the thin frontal portion of this wedge. A structural style and seismic facies analysis, calibrated by refraction data, images a general bipartition of the Messinian evaporite deposits: the `lower subunit', consisting mainly of salt, appears to have undergone ductile-flow deformation, and the `upper subunit', consisting mainly of gypsum and marls, appears to be characte…
The role of geochronology in understanding continental evolution
2010
Geochronology has become one of the most essential tools in reconstructing processes of continental growth and evolution, and in situ dating of minerals has become common practice through the development of high-resolution ion microprobes and laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry techniques. Zircon has established itself as the most robust and reliable mineral to record magmatic and metamorphic processes. The combination of mineral ages with Sm–Nd, Lu–Hf and O isotopic systematics constrains magma sources and their evolution, and a picture is emerging that supports the beginning of modern-style plate tectonics in the early Archaean. Major fields for future research in …
Geomorphological west-east-section through the north chilean andes near antofagasta
2006
The extremely arid western slope of the Andes near Antofagasta is an area of young tectonic movements on the one hand, but of very low erosion rates on the other. Therefore the relief is characterized by very old erosional forms, but fresh and clearly visible tectonic forms. This is quite evident from the following characteristics of a west-east-section from the Coastal Cordillera to the High Cordillera: 1. The great height and steepness of the western escarpment of the Coastal Cordillera, devoid of deep valleys. 2. The preservation of the miocene and pliocene caliche deposits with highly soluble nitrates in the eastern part of the Coastal Cordillera and of the landforms covered by them. 3.…
Late Hercynian Plate and Intraplate Processes within Europe
1987
The Hercynian orogenic belt of Europe consists of a central crystalline ridge which is accompanied on both sides by a rather unmetamorphosed foldbelt. It is speculated that the crystalline ridge represents some kind of island arc system underlain by a segment of continental crust. On both sides this island arc system was involved in subduction of oceanic crust, first of the Mideuropean Sea in the North and then of the Paleotethys in the South. When the continental areas to the north and south of the oceanic areas (North America/Northern Europe and Africa) finally got involved in the subduction processes, continent/continent collision took place on both sides of the island arc system. The tw…
Carbon concentration increases with depth of melting in Earth’s upper mantle
2021
Carbon in the upper mantle controls incipient melting of carbonated peridotite and so acts as a critical driver of plate tectonics. The carbon-rich melts that form control the rate of volatile outflux from the Earth’s interior, contributing to climate evolution over geological times. However, attempts to constrain the carbon concentrations of the mantle source beneath oceanic islands and continental rifts is complicated by pre-eruptive volatile loss from magmas. Here, we compile literature data on magmatic gases, as a surface expression of the pre-eruptive volatile loss, from 12 oceanic island and continental rift volcanoes. We find that the levels of carbon enrichment in magmatic gases cor…
Discussion on Palaeozoic discontinuities in the Kuh-e Surmeh area (Zagros, Iran).
2015
20 pages; International audience; Evidence of several major unconformities in the Lower Palaeozoic succession in Iran lead to question the role of tectonic/eustatism/climate in terms of their formation. The studied Palaeozoic succession in the Kuh-e Surmeh Anticline is characterized by the preservation of two thin Ordovician and Lower Permian Formations separated by a large hiatus encompassing the Upper Ordovician up to the lowermost Permian. The Ordovician sequences were deposited in shallow shoreface to lower offshore environments and the Lower Permian corresponds to a wave-dominated estuarine system evolving to a delta system. These mainly clastic successions represent good reservoirs in…
Fe–Mn-encrusted “Kamenitza” and associated features in the Jurassic of Monte Kumeta (Sicily): subaerial and/or submarine dissolution?
2000
Abstract An unusually jagged dissolution surface, capped by a thick Fe–Mn crust is well exposed in small quarry-cuts of the Jurassic of Monte Kumeta. It was formed on a crinoidal limestone substrate of Pliensbachian age, and is covered by Upper Bajocian Ammonitico Rosso-type sediments, all cross-cut by several generations of neptunian dykes. This peculiar surface is more or less coeval with hardgrounds, Fe–Mn-capped dissolution surfaces and associated neptunian dykes described from other localities of the Western Tethys and currently subject to fierce debates as to their purely submarine (or perhaps partly subaerial) origin. The major goal of this paper is to add new arguments to this debat…
Self-consistent subduction initiation induced by mantle flow
2015
Mantle circulation in planets with strongly temperature-dependent viscosity results in stagnant-lid convection. It is fundamental to understand how this stagnant-lid regime can change into a plate-like convection regime as on the present-day Earth. Here, we use 2D numerical models to study subduction initiation from an initial stagnant lid with laboratory-consistent parameters and without pre-existing weak zones or kinematic boundary conditions. Our results show that subduction can be initiated dynamically as a result of a thermal localization instability. The lithosphere may deform in a stagnant-lid mode, an un-necking mode, a symmetric-subduction mode or an asymmetric-subduction mode. The…