Neogene-Quaternary evolution of the Central Mediterranean region

Mountain building, continent-continent collision and post-collisional opening of back-arc basins are the result of geological processes obviously controlled by plate interaction. In the case of the Central Mediterranean region, the kinematic system describing the interaction between the Europe and A...

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Main Authors: SCANDONE, PAOLO, PATACCA, ETTA
Other Authors: Scandone, Paolo, Patacca, Etta
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11568/192841
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spelling ftunivpisairis:oai:arpi.unipi.it:11568/192841 2024-02-11T10:06:42+01:00 Neogene-Quaternary evolution of the Central Mediterranean region SCANDONE, PAOLO PATACCA, ETTA Scandone, Paolo Patacca, Etta 2004 STAMPA http://hdl.handle.net/11568/192841 eng eng ispartofbook:32nd Intern. Geol. Congr. Florence 2004-Scientific Sessions:abstracts 32nd Intern. Geol. Congr., Session S12.01 The Mediterranean. volume:Scientific Sessions:abstracts (part1) firstpage:21 lastpage:22 numberofpages:2 http://hdl.handle.net/11568/192841 info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2004 ftunivpisairis 2024-01-17T17:50:24Z Mountain building, continent-continent collision and post-collisional opening of back-arc basins are the result of geological processes obviously controlled by plate interaction. In the case of the Central Mediterranean region, the kinematic system describing the interaction between the Europe and Africa plates is closely controlled by the kinematic system describing the evolution of Central and North-Atlantic Ocean. Kinematic models derived from the analysis of the Atlantic magnetic anomalies predict in the Mediterranean region slip vectors acting through Tertiary times that fit very well a lot of first-order observed tectonic structures, mostly in the Alps. The same slip vectors, however, do not justify the development in Neogene and Quaternary times of important geological features such as the Western Mediterranean basin, the Tyrrhenian basin, the Southern Apennines and the Calabrian Arc. These vectors, in fact, appear incompatible both in the magnitudes and in the directions with the vectors reconstructed by regional geology that describe the displacement path the investigated geological objects. The occurrence of such large-scale structural features that appear incompatible with the Atlantic-derived kinematic constraints can be justified by different geodynamic processes, the most important of which is certainly represented by the roll-back of down-going lithosphere in subduction zones (the latter do not necessarily coincide with convergence zones) producing rapid flexure-hinge retreat of the lower plate. The roll-back of a subducting lithosphere appears to be the only mechanism able to modify the Atlantic-versus-Mediterranean kinematic balance by adding in the system new source areas and new sink areas. In our presentation we will illustrate some well documented case histories in which maximum flexure-hinge retreat developed at about 90° with the Atlantic-derived slip vectors and in which the Africa/Adria subduction rates computed from the amount of extension in the back-arc basins, from the flexure-hinge ... Conference Object North Atlantic ARPI - Archivio della Ricerca dell'Università di Pisa
institution Open Polar
collection ARPI - Archivio della Ricerca dell'Università di Pisa
op_collection_id ftunivpisairis
language English
description Mountain building, continent-continent collision and post-collisional opening of back-arc basins are the result of geological processes obviously controlled by plate interaction. In the case of the Central Mediterranean region, the kinematic system describing the interaction between the Europe and Africa plates is closely controlled by the kinematic system describing the evolution of Central and North-Atlantic Ocean. Kinematic models derived from the analysis of the Atlantic magnetic anomalies predict in the Mediterranean region slip vectors acting through Tertiary times that fit very well a lot of first-order observed tectonic structures, mostly in the Alps. The same slip vectors, however, do not justify the development in Neogene and Quaternary times of important geological features such as the Western Mediterranean basin, the Tyrrhenian basin, the Southern Apennines and the Calabrian Arc. These vectors, in fact, appear incompatible both in the magnitudes and in the directions with the vectors reconstructed by regional geology that describe the displacement path the investigated geological objects. The occurrence of such large-scale structural features that appear incompatible with the Atlantic-derived kinematic constraints can be justified by different geodynamic processes, the most important of which is certainly represented by the roll-back of down-going lithosphere in subduction zones (the latter do not necessarily coincide with convergence zones) producing rapid flexure-hinge retreat of the lower plate. The roll-back of a subducting lithosphere appears to be the only mechanism able to modify the Atlantic-versus-Mediterranean kinematic balance by adding in the system new source areas and new sink areas. In our presentation we will illustrate some well documented case histories in which maximum flexure-hinge retreat developed at about 90° with the Atlantic-derived slip vectors and in which the Africa/Adria subduction rates computed from the amount of extension in the back-arc basins, from the flexure-hinge ...
author2 Scandone, Paolo
Patacca, Etta
format Conference Object
author SCANDONE, PAOLO
PATACCA, ETTA
spellingShingle SCANDONE, PAOLO
PATACCA, ETTA
Neogene-Quaternary evolution of the Central Mediterranean region
author_facet SCANDONE, PAOLO
PATACCA, ETTA
author_sort SCANDONE, PAOLO
title Neogene-Quaternary evolution of the Central Mediterranean region
title_short Neogene-Quaternary evolution of the Central Mediterranean region
title_full Neogene-Quaternary evolution of the Central Mediterranean region
title_fullStr Neogene-Quaternary evolution of the Central Mediterranean region
title_full_unstemmed Neogene-Quaternary evolution of the Central Mediterranean region
title_sort neogene-quaternary evolution of the central mediterranean region
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/11568/192841
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation ispartofbook:32nd Intern. Geol. Congr. Florence 2004-Scientific Sessions:abstracts
32nd Intern. Geol. Congr., Session S12.01 The Mediterranean.
volume:Scientific Sessions:abstracts (part1)
firstpage:21
lastpage:22
numberofpages:2
http://hdl.handle.net/11568/192841
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