Analogue modeling of positive inversion tectonics along differently oriented pre-thrusting normal faults: An application to the Central-Northern Apennines of Italy

2014 ◽  
Vol 126 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 943-955 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Di Domenica ◽  
L. Bonini ◽  
F. Calamita ◽  
G. Toscani ◽  
C. Galuppo ◽  
...  
2006 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 333-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Collettini ◽  
N. De Paola ◽  
R.E. Holdsworth ◽  
M.R. Barchi

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesca Stendardi ◽  
Gianluca Vignaroli ◽  
Giulio Viola

<p>The Northern Apennines are an accretionary wedge formed in response to the Late Cretaceous-Eocene closure of the Ligurian-Piedmont ocean and the subsequent Oligocene-Miocene convergence and collision between Africa and Europe. The wedge is formed by a stack of different paleogeographic units which, from the innermost to the outermost and from top to bottom, are: (i) the Ligurian Domain (formed by Jurassic ophiolites and their Cretaceous-to-Paleocene sedimentary cover); (ii) the Sub-Ligurian Domain (Paleocene-to-lower Miocene deep marine sediments and turbidites); (iii) the Tuscan-Umbria-Marche Domain (mostly including Jurassic-to-Oligocene platform and basinal carbonate successions, overlain by Miocene-Pliocene turbidites). The wedge is shaped by WNW-ESE-striking and SW-dipping thrusts, accommodating a general northeastward tectonic transport. Atop of the deformed Ligurian Domain there occur the Epiligurian Units, which consist of middle Eocene-upper Miocene bathyal to shallow-water siliciclastic deposits infilling wedge-top basins. These Units presently fill in separate basins with poor lateral interconnectivity due to erosion and deformation. Since the Miocene, thrusting toward the (eastern) orogenic foreland occurred simultaneously with extension in the (western) hinterland domain, causing the formation of NW-SE-striking normal faults. Presently, focal mechanisms of the stronger earthquakes constrain dominant thrusting associated with NE-SW regional shortening, whereas the extensional regime controls the seismicity along the axial portion of the wedge. This recently launched study aims to better characterize the deformation structures affecting the Epiligurian Units in the internal and external sectors of the Northern Apennines (Emilia-Romagna Region) with the goal to provide a comprehensive syn-to-post accretion evolutionary scenario for these shallow basins. In particular, deformation structures affecting these wedge-top sequences of the inner (southwestern) side of the wedge are being studied by their systematic geometric and kinematic multiscalar and multitechnique characterization. Top-to-the NE, WNW-ESE-striking thrusts/reverse faults, dipping moderately to SSW are defined by planar slip surfaces associated with thin clastic damage zones. Top-to-the SE, ENE-WSW-striking thrusts/reverse faults, are instead generally devoid of well-developed damage zones. These contractional faults are systematically cut by NW-SE and NE-SW-striking normal and oblique faults systems, characterized by mutually intersecting fault planes accommodating centimetric to decimetric throws. Associated with the extensional structures occur widespread cataclastic and disaggregation deformation bands. They are found as either single bands or clusters, cutting across upper Eocene coarse-grained sandstones. Our preliminary results show that the Epiligurian Units experienced a complex tectonic evolution, including NNE-SSW shortening followed by NE-SW extension. The structural record of these wedge top basins is useful to infer the kinematics and rate of wedge build up and tearing down during the progressive evolution of the continental collision. The Epiligurian Units can thus be considered as useful gages of the deformation history of the Northern Apennines wedge, with noteworthy implications on its current seismotectonic setting.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Brogi

<p>The Neogene and Quaternary tectonic evolution of the inner Northern Apennines (i.e southern Tuscany and northern Tyrrhenian Sea), as well as its crustal features (i.e. low crustal thickness, Neogene-Quaternary magmatism, widespread geothermal anomalies, lateral segmentation of the stacked tectonic units, extensive deep sedimentary basins), are framed in different geodynamic scenarios: compressional, extensional or both, pulsing. Consequently, the basin and range structure that characterises the northern Tyrrhenian Sea and southern Tuscany is considered as a consequence of (i) out-of-sequence thrusts and related thrust-top-basins, (ii) polyphased normal faulting that formed horst and graben structures or (iii) a combination of both. This paper provides a new dataset from a sector of the eastern inner Northern Apennines (i.e. Monti del Chianti - Monte Cetona ridge) contributing to this scientific debate. New fieldwork and structural analysis carried out in selected areas along the ridge allowed to define the chronology of the main tectonic events on the basis of their influence on the marine and continental sedimentation. The dataset supports for early Miocene - (?) Serravallian in-sequence and out-of-sequence thrusting. Thrusting produced complex staking patterns of Tuscan and Ligurian Units. Extensional detachments developed since later middle Miocene and controlled the Neogene sedimentation in bowl-shaped structural depressions, later dissected by normal faults enhancing the accommodation space for Pliocene marine deposits in broad NNW-trending basins (Siena-Radicofani and Valdichiana Basins). In this perspective, no data supports for active, continuous or pulsing, compressional tectonics after late Serravalian. As a result, in the whole inland inner Northern Apennines the extensional tectonics was continuously active at least since middle Miocene and controlled the basins development, magmatism and structure of the crust and lithosphere.</p>


2014 ◽  
Vol 67 ◽  
pp. 154-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Collettini ◽  
B.M. Carpenter ◽  
C. Viti ◽  
F. Cruciani ◽  
S. Mollo ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 173 (5) ◽  
pp. 449-459 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Gómez ◽  
Jaume Vergés ◽  
Carlos Riaza

Abstract The northern margin of the Basque-Cantabrian Basin was analysed combining stratigraphic and structural data from both surface and subsurface together with reflectance of vitrinite data from oil wells. The use of cross-section balancing techniques in addition to thermal modelling enabled us to reconstruct the tectonic, burial and thermal evolutions of the basin margin as well as those of the Landes High to the N in two different periods. The section restoration at the end of the Cretaceous shows a northern basin margin structure influenced by evaporites related to south-dipping normal faults. The reconstruction in middle Eocene times yielded up to 1 800 m of Paleocene-middle Eocene deposits on top of the basin margin. Subsequent tectonic inversion related to the Pyrenean compression led to the north-directed thrusting of basement units and to the formation of thrust slices or inverted folds in the cover along the northern margin of the basin. Tectonic subsidence analysis together with maturity data provided evidence that oil was generated in the basin during the late syn-rift and post-rift stages in the Late Cretaceous and became overmature during the period of incipient inversion after 55 Ma. In the autochthonous Landes High, the oil was generated after the tectonic inversion period 37 Ma.


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