Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8946391 | Journal of Structural Geology | 2018 | 55 Pages |
Abstract
The structural evolution of the Oligocene Rieserferner pluton (Eastern Alps), developed during pluton cooling and exhumation, includes localized deformation structures consisting of: (i) steeply dipping joints, leucocratic dykes and quartz-feldspar veins, and related ductile shear zones (formed at â¼600 °C); (ii) shallowly dipping joints with associated epidote and quartz veins, and related ductile shear zones (â¼450 °C); (iii) steeply dipping mafic dykes and calcite + white mica-bearing brittle-ductile faults (â¼300 °C); (iv) steeply dipping pseudotachylyte-bearing faults (<250 °C); and (v) zeolite-bearing faults (<200 °C). The structures (i-iii) and (iv-v) can be dated to the Oligocene and Early Miocene, respectively. The kinematic analysis suggests a change in local shortening direction from N290° to N350°, interpreted to reflect a change from transtension in the Early Oligocene, associated with a N060°-directed plate divergence, to transpression in the Miocene, associated with a (N)NW-directed plate convergence. This evolution reflects the sequence of transient and long-term geodynamic processes occurring in the Eastern Alps during the Tertiary, including slab break-off of the subducted European slab, the indentation of the Dolomites promontory against the Alpine stack of nappes, and the exhumation and lateral escape tectonics of the Alpine belt.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Alberto Ceccato, Giorgio Pennacchioni,