S. Agostini, P. Di Giuseppe, P. Manetti, M. Y. Savaşçın, S. Conticelli
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引用次数: 2
Abstract
Widespread sodic alkali basaltic activity developed from Early Miocene to Pleistocene, around the northern termination of the Dead Sea Fault Zone, and in the North-West foreland of the Arabian Plate, in South-East Turkey. Volcanic activity started within the Gaziantep Basin during the Early-Late Miocene (21.2-7.0 Ma), and further East, abundant magmatism brought to the formation of the Karacadağ Shield Volcano, starting from Middle Miocene throughout the Holocene (12.1-0.01 Ma). During the Pleistocene, volcanism developed also around the Anatolia-Africa-Arabia triple junction, along the Karataş-Osmaniye Fault, and along the northern segment of the Dead Sea Fault, in the Karasu Basin. + apatite + Fe-Ti oxides, coupled with assimilation of crustal materials. The extent and the chemical modifications induced by this process are such that in some of the oldest and most evolved samples, the pristine Na-alkaline affinity is obliterated, and a secondary subalkaline signature is overprinted. This effect is less evident or negligible in more recent lavas, which preserve their primary features, being erupted in a well-developed fault system or in a long lasting, chemically homogeneous, magmatic feeding system. The magmatism studied here is quite unusual and not frequent in the frame of Na-alkaline intraplate volcanism, being characterised by abundant intermediate products and by evolutionary processes strongly affected by crustal contamination. In our view, this is due to the peculiar setting of the region, which is the locus of a significant mantle upwelling, accompanied by very limited or absent extensional rate.
期刊介绍:
The Italian Journal of Geosciences (born from the merging of the Bollettino della Società Geologica Italiana and the Bollettino del Servizio Geologico d''Italia) provides an international outlet for the publication of high-quality original research contributions in the broad field of the geosciences.
It publishes research papers, special short papers, review papers, discussion-and-replies for their rapid distribution to the international geosciences community.
The journal is firstly intended to call attention to the Italian territory and the adjacent areas for the exceptional role they play in the understanding of geological processes, in the development of modern geology and the Earth sciences in general.
The main focus of the journal is on the geology of Italy and the surrounding sedimentary basins and landmasses, and on their relationships with the Mediterranean geology and geodynamics. Nevertheless, manuscripts on process-oriented and regional studies concerning any other area of the World are also considered for publication.
Papers on structural geology, stratigraphy, sedimentology, basin analysis, paleontology, ecosystems, paleoceanography, paleoclimatology, planetary sciences, geomorphology, volcanology, mineralogy, geochemistry, petrology, geophysics, geodynamics, hydrogeology, geohazards, marine and engineering geology, modelling of geological process, history of geology, the conservation of the geological heritage, and all related applied sciences are welcome.