Back to Search Start Over

Rifting and shallow-dipping detachments, clues from the Corinth Rift and the Aegean

Authors :
Jolivet, Laurent
Labrousse, Loïc
Agard, Philippe
Lacombe, Olivier
Bailly, Vivien
Lecomte, Emmanuel
Mouthereau, Frédéric
Mehl, Caroline
Source :
Tectonophysics. Mar2010, Vol. 483 Issue 3/4, p287-304. 18p.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Abstract: The Corinth Rift is superimposed on the Hellenic nappe stack that formed at the expense of the Apulian continental crust above the subducting African slab. Extension started in the Pliocene and the major steep normal faults that control the geometry of the present-day rift were born very recently, some 600kyr ago only. They root into a shallow-dipping zone of microseismicity recorded near the base of the upper crust. The significance of this seismogenic zone is debated. Considering the northward dip of the zone of microseismicity, the depth of microearthquakes and their focal mechanisms, we observe a strong similarity with the northern Cycladic detachments in terms of expected pressure, temperature conditions and kinematics. We herein show (1) that the formation of the Corinth Rift can be considered a part of a continuum of extension that started some 30–35Ma in the Aegean and that was recently localised in a more restricted area, (2) that the present-day structure and kinematics of the Corinth Rift can be explained with a series of decollements relayed by steeper ramps that altogether formed a mechanically weak, crustal-scale detachment, and (3) that the deformation, fluid behaviour and metamorphic features seen in the northern Cycladic metamorphic core complexes can be good analogues of the processes at work below the Corinth Rift. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00401951
Volume :
483
Issue :
3/4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Tectonophysics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
48401772
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2009.11.001