scholarly journals The 3D geometry of the Naxos detachment fault and the three-dimensional tectonic architecture of the Naxos metamorphic core complex, Aegean Sea, Greece

2018 ◽  
Vol 108 (1) ◽  
pp. 287-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henrik Linnros ◽  
Reuben Hansman ◽  
Uwe Ring
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikolaus Froitzheim ◽  
Linus Klug

<p>The Permian was a time of strong crustal extension in the area of the later-formed Alpine orogen. This involved extensional detachment faulting and the formation of metamorphic core complexes. We describe (1) an area in the Southern Alps (Valsassina, Orobic chain) where a metamorphic core complex and detachment fault have been preserved and only moderately overprinted by Alpine collisional shortening, and (2) an area in the Austroalpine (Schneeberg) where Alpine deformation and metamorphism are intense but a Permian low-angle normal fault is reconstructed from the present-day tectonometamorphic setting. In the Southern Alps case, the Grassi Detachment Fault represents a low-angle detachment capping a metamorphic core complex in the footwall which was affected by upward‐increasing, top‐to‐the‐southeast mylonitization. Two granitoid intrusions occur in the core complex, c. 289 Ma and c. 287 Ma, the older of which was syn-tectonic with respect to the extensional mylonites (Pohl, Froitzheim, et al., 2018, Tectonics). Consequently, detachment‐related mylonitic shearing took place during the Early Permian and ended at ~288 Ma, but kinematically coherent brittle faulting continued. Considering 30° anticlockwise rotation of the Southern Alps since Early Permian, the extension direction of the Grassi Detachment Fault was originally ~N‐S and the sense of transport top-South. In this area, there is no evidence of Permian strike-slip faulting but only of extension. In the Schneeberg area of the Austroalpine, a unit of Early Paleozoic metasediments with only Eoalpine (Cretaceous) garnet, the Schneeberg Complex, overlies units with two-phased (Variscan plus Eoalpine) garnet both to the North (Ötztal Complex) and to the South (Texel Complex). The basal contact of the Schneeberg Complex was active as a north-directed thrust during the Eoalpine orogeny. It reactivated a pre-existing, post-Variscan but pre-Mesozoic, i.e. Permian low-angle normal fault. This normal fault had emplaced the Schneeberg Complex with only low Variscan metamorphism (no Variscan garnet) on an amphibolite-facies metamorphic Variscan basement. The original normal fault dipped south or southeast, like the Grassi detachment in the Southern Alps. As the most deeply subducted units of the Eoalpine orogen (e.g. Koralpe, Saualpe, Pohorje) are also the ones showing the strongest Permian rift-related magmatism, we hypothesize that the Eoalpine subduction was localized in a deep Permian rift system within continental crust.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstantinos Soukis ◽  
Daniel Stockli

<p>The birth and death of oceanic areas have often proved to involve contemporaneous destruction of previously created and evolved oceanic domains and the initiation of new ones in back-arc areas. As a result, several and often competing geodynamic processes, have been taking place at the same time, thus creating a complex tectonostratigraphy.</p><p>The Attic-Cycladic Crystalline Complex (ACCC), in the Aegean Sea (Greece), the outcome of the formation and destruction of Paleotethyan and Tethyan oceanic domains, is one such case. Four major units have been identified in the ACCC. These are from top to bottom, the complex Upper Cycladic Nappe, the Cycladic Blueschist Unit, the pre-alpine Cycladic Basement, and the Basal Unit. The present-day configuration has resulted from an Eocene stage of subduction and metamorphism under blueschist to eclogite facies and an Oligocene-Miocene exhumation and metamorphic core complex formation, through a combination of contractional and extensional mechanisms. Original relations between these four units have been obscured from the Cenozoic tectonometamorphic processes and several conflicting views have been expressed in the literature, regarding the nature of the Cycladic Blueschist domain, the relation between the Cycladic Blueschist Unit and the Cycladic Basement.</p><p>In this paper, we make a reconstruction of the domain, from which the Cycladic Blueschist Unit originated, based on a synthesis of structural, tectonostratigraphic, geochemical, and geochronological data. Through this reconstruction, we attempt to reconcile existing controversies and differences of views in the literature and to highlight the major structures that controlled the main features and geological evolution of this remarkable area.</p>


2004 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Michael O'Neill ◽  
Jeff D Lonn ◽  
David R Lageson ◽  
Michael J Kunk

A sinuous zone of gently southeast-dipping low-angle Tertiary normal faults is exposed for 100 km along the eastern margins of the Anaconda and Flint Creek ranges in southwest Montana. Faults in the zone variously place Mesoproterozoic through Paleozoic sedimentary rocks on younger Tertiary granitic rocks or on sedimentary rocks older than the overlying detached rocks. Lower plate rocks are lineated and mylonitic at the main fault and, below the mylonitic front, are cut by mylonitic mesoscopic to microscopic shear zones. The upper plate consists of an imbricate stack of younger-on-older sedimentary rocks that are locally mylonitic at the main, lowermost detachment fault but are characteristically strongly brecciated or broken. Kinematic indicators in the lineated mylonite indicate tectonic transport to the east-southeast. Syntectonic sedimentary breccia and coarse conglomerate derived solely from upper plate rocks were deposited locally on top of hanging-wall rocks in low-lying areas between fault blocks and breccia zones. Muscovite occurs locally as mica fish in mylonitic quartzites at or near the main detachment. The 40Ar/39Ar age spectrum obtained from muscovite in one mylonitic quartzite yielded an age of 47.2 + 0.14 Ma, interpreted to be the age of mylonitization. The fault zone is interpreted as a detachment fault that bounds a metamorphic core complex, here termed the Anaconda metamorphic core complex, similar in age and character to the Bitterroot mylonite that bounds the Bitterroot metamorphic core complex along the Idaho-Montana state line 100 km to the west. The Bitterroot and Anaconda core complexes are likely components of a continuous, tectonically integrated system. Recognition of this core complex expands the region of known early Tertiary brittle-ductile crustal extension eastward into areas of profound Late Cretaceous contractile deformation characterized by complex structural interactions between the overthrust belt and Laramide basement uplifts, overprinted by late Tertiary Basin and Range faulting.


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