[1-5] The importance of Iberia for the kinematic reconstruction of the Mesozoic Alpine Tethys

Abstract: Fossil remnants of rifted margins sampled in orogens enable to unravel the nature of rocks, structures and conditions controlling the formation of rifted margins and lithosphere breakup. However, a major problem in orogens is that disconnected remnants of only one margin are preserved, whi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Societa Geologica Italiana 2021, Frasca, Gianluca
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Underline Science Inc. 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.48448/hwf9-3312
https://underline.io/lecture/33719-1-5-the-importance-of-iberia-for-the-kinematic-reconstruction-of-the-mesozoic-alpine-tethys
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Summary:Abstract: Fossil remnants of rifted margins sampled in orogens enable to unravel the nature of rocks, structures and conditions controlling the formation of rifted margins and lithosphere breakup. However, a major problem in orogens is that disconnected remnants of only one margin are preserved, while the conjugate has often been subducted and/or obliterated during convergence. Our understanding of rift processes leading to lithosphere breakup is hampered by the impossibility to direct access to well-preserved examples of conjugate rifted margins fossilized onshore. Here we focus our attention on the Mesozoic Alpine Tethys, bounded by the European and African plates and interleaving crustal blocks such Iberia and Adria. A key point has to be resolved in order to reconstruct conjugate distal margins in the Alpine Tethys paleogeographic setting. Iberia has to be positioned during the Mesozoic taking into account the evolution and opening of the southern North Atlantic and the Bay of Biscay. Here we propose a new Mesozoic kinematic model for Iberia, which is compatible at a first order and large scale with recently published data and interpretations from the North Iberian margin and the Pyrenean domain. We discuss the impact of these results for the kinematic reconstruction of the Alpine Tethys. Authors:* Frasca G.* & Manatschal G.