Manuel Curzi, Giulio Viola, Costantino Zuccari, Luca Aldega, Andrea Billi, Roelant van der Lelij, Andrew Kylander-Clark, Gianluca Vignaroli
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Eastern Southern Alps fold-and-thrust belt (ESA) is part of the seismically active S-verging retro-wedge of the European Alps. Its temporal tectonic evolution during continental shortening has so far been constrained by few and low-resolution indirect time constraints. Aiming at better elucidating the ESA spatiotemporal evolution, we gathered new structural and geochronological data from two regional thrust systems: the innermost south verging Valsugana Thrust (VT) and the more external Belluno Thrust System (BTS). Field work allowed us to constrain the geometry and kinematics of those thrusts and related folds and informed our sampling strategy to carry out fault gouge K-Ar and tectonic carbonate U-Pb dating from representative samples structurally associated with the VT and BTS. Our results suggest that the VT was active already in the Late Cretaceous (between ∼78 and 76 Ma) in response to far-field stresses, with repeated reactivation continuing to the Late Miocene (∼6 Ma). The BTS recorded two distinct deformation events during the Oligocene (∼30 Ma) and at the Oligocene-Miocene boundary (∼23 Ma). The VT was active for ∼72 Myr and partly acted during out-of-sequence thrusting. Based on regional correlations, we propose that the ESA share a similar spatiotemporal deformation history with the central Southern Alps farther to the west. We suggest a conceptual regional tectonic model wherein multiple, broadly coeval deformation events occurred in the entire Southern Alps during their long-lived orogenic deformation in response to generally continuous NW-SE shortening.
期刊介绍:
Tectonics (TECT) presents original scientific contributions that describe and explain the evolution, structure, and deformation of Earth¹s lithosphere. Contributions are welcome from any relevant area of research, including field, laboratory, petrological, geochemical, geochronological, geophysical, remote-sensing, and modeling studies. Multidisciplinary studies are particularly encouraged. Tectonics welcomes studies across the range of geologic time.