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The eastern Black Sea-Caucasus region during the Cretaceous: New evidence to constrain its tectonic evolution

Authors :
Sosson, Marc
Stephenson, Randell
Sheremet, Yevgeniya
Rolland, Yann
Adamia, Shota
Melkonian, Rafael
Kangarli, Talat
Yegorova, Tamara
Avagyan, Ara
Galoyan, Ghazar
Danelian, Taniel
Hässig, Marc
Meijers, Maud
Müller, Carla
Sahakyan, Lilit
Sadradze, Nino
Alania, Victor
Enukidze, Onice
Mosar, Jon
Sosson, Marc
Stephenson, Randell
Sheremet, Yevgeniya
Rolland, Yann
Adamia, Shota
Melkonian, Rafael
Kangarli, Talat
Yegorova, Tamara
Avagyan, Ara
Galoyan, Ghazar
Danelian, Taniel
Hässig, Marc
Meijers, Maud
Müller, Carla
Sahakyan, Lilit
Sadradze, Nino
Alania, Victor
Enukidze, Onice
Mosar, Jon

Abstract

We report new observations in the eastern Black Sea-Caucasus region that allow reconstructing the evolution of the Neotethys in the Cretaceous. At that time, the Neotethys oceanic plate was subducting northward below the continental Eurasia plate. Based on the analysis of the obducted ophiolites that crop out throughout Lesser Caucasus and East Anatolides, we show that a spreading center (AESA basin) existed within the Neotethys, between Middle Jurassic and Early Cretaceous. Later, the spreading center was carried into the subduction with the Neotethys plate. We argue that the subduction of the spreading center opened a slab window that allowed asthenospheric material to move upward, in effect thermally and mechanically weakening the otherwise strong Eurasia upper plate. The local weakness zone favored the opening of the Black Sea back-arc basins. Later, in the Late Cretaceous, the AESA basin obducted onto the Taurides–Anatolides–South Armenia Microplate (TASAM), which then collided with Eurasia along a single suture zone (AESA suture).

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn962192532
Document Type :
Electronic Resource