• Title of article

    Miocene to Present kinematics of the NW-Alps: evidences from remote sensing, structural analysis, seismotectonics and thermochronology

  • Author/Authors

    Bistacchi، Andrea نويسنده , , Eva، Elena نويسنده , , Massironi، Matteo نويسنده , , Solarino، Stefano نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
  • Pages
    -204
  • From page
    205
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    At the end of their Cretaceous-Tertiary subduction-collision history, the Alps underwent a complex brittle reworking. An integrated study has been undertaken in order to explain the Miocene to Present kinematic evolution of the north-western Alps. Data from remote sensing, structural geology, seismotectonics and thermochronology have been analysed and compared. Remote sensing and structural analysis evidence that the PennineGraian nappe stack constitutes a continuous block, characterised by high-strain border-zones and by a quite homogenous internal deformation. The border-zones of this block are: (i) the normal SW-dipping Simplon fault; (ii) the broad dextral strike-slip system, constituted by the Rhone and Chamonix lines and by the Penninic and Briançonnais reactivated frontal thrusts, and, to the SE of the block, (iii) the recently discovered sinistral strike-slip Ospizio Sottile fault. A complex network of faults and fractures dissects the Pennine-Graian block, the most important being the E-W striking Aosta-Ranzola fault system. Even if these faults do not generally show large displacements in the Miocene, they constitute an important strain marker, since they have a regular frequency and indicate a general NE-SW extension of the block. Seismicity is mainly concentrated along the strike-slip border-zones and focal plane solutions generally agree with surface data (within discussed errors). Thermochronology indicates that, from the Late Miocene onwards, no major changes took place in the exhumation pattern, and hence in the overall kinematics. This evidence supports the general agreement between present-day deformation (seismotectonic data) and kinematics in the recent-past (structural geology data). Different tectonic reconstructions are checked with the discussed data set. In the authorsʹ opinion, the SW-ward orogen-parallel escape model better explain the presented body of structural, seismotectonic and thermochronology evidences.
  • Keywords
    Philosophy of language , Wittgenstein , Grammar , Logic
  • Journal title
    Journal of Geodynamics
  • Serial Year
    2000
  • Journal title
    Journal of Geodynamics
  • Record number

    55642