73 research outputs found
A Geological Itinerary Through the Southern Apennine Thrust-Belt (BasilicataâSouthern Italy)
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Contrasting styles of (U)HP rock exhumation along the Cenozoic Adria-Europe plate boundary (Western Alps, Calabria, Corsica)
Since the first discovery of ultrahigh pressure (UHP) rocks 30 years ago in the Western Alps, the mechanisms for exhumation of (U)HP terranes worldwide are still debated. In the western Mediterranean, the presently accepted model of synconvergent exhumation (e.g., the channel-flow model) is in conflict with parts of the geologic record. We synthesize regional geologic data and present alternative exhumation mechanisms that consider the role of divergence within subduction zones. These mechanisms, i.e., (i) the motion of the upper plate away from the trench and (ii) the rollback of the lower plate, are discussed in detail with particular reference to the Cenozoic Adria-Europe plate boundary, and along three different transects (Western Alps, Calabria-Sardinia, and Corsica-Northern Apennines). In the Western Alps, (U)HP rocks were exhumed from the greatest depth at the rear of the accretionary wedge during motion of the upper plate away from the trench. Exhumation was extremely fast, and associated with very low geothermal gradients. In Calabria, HP rocks were exhumed from shallower depths and at lower rates during rollback of the Adriatic plate, with repeated exhumation pulses progressively younging toward the foreland. Both mechanisms were active to create boundary divergence along the Corsica-Northern Apennines transect, where European southeastward subduction was progressively replaced along strike by Adriatic northwestward subduction. The tectonic scenario depicted for the Western Alps trench during Eocene exhumation of (U)HP rocks correlates well with present-day eastern Papua New Guinea, which is presented as a modern analog of the Paleogene Adria-Europe plate boundary
The Culmination of an Oblique TimeâTransgressive Arc Continent Collision: The Pollino Massif Between Calabria and the Southern Apennines, Italy
AbstractThe Pollino Massif is the most southeastern outcrop of the Apennine core. It marks the transition between Apenninic shortening and extension, respectively, SE and NW of the massif and is also the cusp of a southeastward plunge that characterizes the submerged Apennines. The SE limit of NEâSW extension merges with the east limit of Tyrrhenian extension in Calabria. This strategic position is expected to transition southeastward in the progressive oblique collision of the Calabrian forearc and Apulia. We test this hypothesis using published results and new field data. The timeâtransgressive emergence of basins on the Apennine thrust wedge is quantitatively consistent with the ESE rollback of the Calabrian arc. Specifically, a thrustânormal slip reversal on a SW dipping fault is responsible for the tectonic collapse that lead to the Mercure Basin along strike NW of the Pollino Massif and to an eastâtoâwest reversal of drainage. This reversal is timed by an intermediate stage of trapped internal drainage with MidâPleistocene lacustrine sedimentation, but it may young to SE as the normal displacement on the border fault decreases gradually to SE and vanishes near the apex of the massif. On the SE side of the massif, contractional tectonics persists at least into the MidâPleistocene and likely later, while NEâSW extension is absent. Prominent normal faults in that area accommodate rangeâparallel extension and are coupled with the thrust faults. The combination of longitudinal extension with a counterclockwise rotation of hangingâwall units and thrust directivity can account for the final setting in the Apennines
Cold subduction zone in northern Calabria (Italy) revealed by lawsoniteâclinopyroxene blueschists
Lawsonite blueschists are important markers of cold subduction zones, subjected to intense fluid circulation. This is because lawsonite preservation in exhumed blueschists and eclogites is typically linked to cold exhumation paths, accompanied by hydration. In the Catena Costiera (Calabria, southern Italy), lawsoniteâclinopyroxene blueschists of the DiamanteâTerranova Unit, affected by ductile shearing and retrogression, are exposed. Blueschists contain zoned clinopyroxene crystals, showing coreârim compositional variation from diopside to omphacite and hosting primary inclusions of lawsonite and titanite. Thermodynamic modelling of phase equilibria in the NCKFMASHTO system revealed peak metamorphic conditions of 2.0â2.1 GPa and 475â490°C for the Alpine subduction in Calabria. The subsequent postâpeak metamorphic evolution mainly proceeded along a decompression and cooling path up to ~1.1 GPa and ~380°C. The final exhumation stages are recorded in the sheared blueschists where a mylonitic to ultramylonitic foliation developed at ~0.7 GPa and 290â315°C. Therefore, the PâT evolution of the DiamanteâTerranova blueschists mostly occurred in the stability field of lawsonite, sustained by H2Oâsaturated conditions during the exhumation path. The results of this study indicate that the blueschists underwent peak metamorphic conditions higher than previously thought, reaching a maximum depth of ~70 km under a very cold geothermal gradient (~6.6°C/km), during the Eocene subduction of the Ligurian Tethys oceanic crust in Calabria
Seismotectonics and landslides of the Crati Graben (Calabrian Arc, Southern Italy)
The Crati Graben is a depression of Plio-Holocene age mainly controlled by extensional NâS striking faults and WNWâESE transcurrent faults, in its northern and southern extremity. It is characterized by high landslide susceptibility due to the particular geo-structural pattern and seismotectonic characters. Landslides involve many villages, infrastructure and food crops, bringing serious economic and social damage. The seismotectonic and landslides Main Map of the Crati Graben, described in this paper, represents an update in detail of the framework of landslide risk areas and shows the main active and recent faults of the Crati Graben. The landslides and the faults, have been identified and classified, originally at detail scale (1:5000) and, then, represented at 1:50,000 scale. The geo-structural and geomorphological data were analysed in a geographic information system. The work has revealed a correlation between the trend of faults with respect to the distribution of landslides and of the historical and instrumental seismicity. The work presents an updated knowledge framework of risk conditions of the study zone, where risk areas related to slope instability are hierarchically classified according to the destructive potential of landslides. This document may be therefore a useful reference in planning and prioritising in the design of interventions for the safety of slopes and waterways
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