scholarly journals Tectonic control on the palaeogeographical evolution of the Miocene seaway along the Western Alpine foreland basin

2021 ◽  
pp. SP523-2021-78
Author(s):  
Amir Kalifi ◽  
Philippe Sorrel ◽  
Philippe-Hervé Leloup ◽  
Albert Galy ◽  
Vincenzo Spina ◽  
...  

AbstractThe Miocene of the Western Alpine foreland basin were deposited in a North-South seaway along the active alpine orogenic front. In the subalpine massifs and the southern Jura mountains, the revised Miocene stratigraphy documents a detailed chronology of thrust propagation at the western alpine front, where tectonic activity had a primary influence on seaway palaeogeographical evolution. Here we propose nine palaeogeographical maps during the Miocene, the first of which depicts the initial Miocene transgression at ∼21.0 Ma. Between ∼18.05 Ma and ∼12.0 Ma, a westward retreat of the Miocene Sea occurred in response to the activation of the basal thrust of the Belledonne massif, which in turn triggered successive fault zones from east to west. At ∼10.0 Ma, a major uplift phase intervened and induced a rapid southward retreat of the Miocene Sea. The reconstructed palaeogeographical maps outline the main controls on the foreland basin seaway evolution: (i) the timing of the main thrusts, (ii) the inherited palaeotopography and (iii) eustatic sea-level changes during the Miocene. These reconstructions are integrated at the basin scale, highlighting the southward to westward-directed seaway migration in response to the Belledonne thrust activity that deeply shaped the palaeogeographical evolution during the early to middle Miocene.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elmar Buchner ◽  
Volker Sach ◽  
Martin Schmieder

Abstract The Nördlinger Ries and the Steinheim Basin are widely perceived as a Middle Miocene impact crater doublet. We discovered two independent earthquake-produced seismite horizons in North Alpine Foreland Basin deposits. The older seismite horizon,associated with the Ries impact is overlain by in situ-preserved distal impact ejecta, forming a unique continental seismite-ejecta couplet within a distance up to 180 km from the crater. The younger seismite unit, also triggered by a major palaeo-earthquake, comprises clastic dikes that cut through the Ries seismite-ejecta couplet. The clastic dikes were likely formed in response to the Steinheim impact, some kyr after the Ries impact, in line with paleontologic results. With the Ries and Steinheim impacts as two separate events, Southern Germany witnessed a double disaster in the Middle Miocene. The magnitude–distance relationship of seismite formation during large earthquakes suggests the seismic and destructive potential of impact-earthquakes may be significantly underestimated.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elmar Buchner ◽  
Volker J. Sach ◽  
Martin Schmieder

AbstractThe Nördlinger Ries and the Steinheim Basin are widely perceived as a Middle Miocene impact crater doublet. We discovered two independent earthquake-produced seismite horizons in North Alpine Foreland Basin deposits potentially related to both impacts. The older seismite horizon, demonstrated to be associated with the Ries impact, is overlain by distal impact ejecta in situ, forming a unique continental seismite-ejecta couplet within a distance of up to 180 km from the crater. The younger seismite unit, also produced by a major palaeo-earthquake, comprises clastic dikes that cut through the Ries seismite-ejecta couplet. The clastic dikes may have formed in response to the Steinheim impact, some kyr after the Ries impact, in line with paleontologic results that indicate a time gap of about 0.5 Myr between the Ries and Steinheim events. This interpretation suggests the Ries and Steinheim impacts represent two temporally separate events in Southern Germany that, thus, witnessed a double disaster in the Middle Miocene. The magnitude–distance relationship of seismite formation during large earthquakes suggests the seismic and destructive potential of impact-induced earthquakes may be underestimated.


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