Geophysical‐geological transect and tectonic evolution of the Swiss‐Italian Alps
- 1 October 1996
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Tectonics
- Vol. 15 (5) , 1036-1064
- https://doi.org/10.1029/96tc00433
Abstract
A complete Alpine cross section integrates numerous seismic reflection and refraction profiles, across and along strike, with published and new field data. The deepest parts of the profile are constrained by geophysical data only, while structural features at intermediate levels are largely depicted according to the results of three‐dimensional models making use of seismic and field geological data. The geometry of the highest structural levels is constrained by classical along‐strike projections of field data parallel to the pronounced easterly axial dip of all tectonic units. Because the transect is placed close to the western erosional margin of the Austroalpine nappes of the Eastern Alps, it contains all the major tectonic units of the Alps. A model for the tectonic evolution along the transect is proposed in the form of scaled and area‐balanced profile sketches. Shortening within the Austroalpine nappes is testimony of a separate Cretaceous‐age orogenic event. West directed thrusting in these units is related to westward propagation of a thrust wedge resulting from continental collision along the Meliata‐Hallstatt Ocean further to the east. Considerable amounts of oceanic and continental crustal material were subducted during Tertiary orogeny, which involved some 500 km of N‐S convergence between Europe and Apulia. Consequently, only a very small percentage of this crustal material is preserved within the nappes depicted in the transect. Postcollisional shortening is characterized by the simultaneous activity of gently dipping north directed detachments and steeply inclined south directed detachments, both detachments nucleating at the interface between lower and upper crust. Large scale wedging of the Adriatic (or Apulian) lower crust into a gap opening between the subduced European lower crust and the pile of thin upper crustal flakes (Alpine nappes) indicates a relatively strong lower crust and detachment between upper and lower crust.Keywords
This publication has 63 references indexed in Scilit:
- The building of the Central Swiss Alps: an experimental approachPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- The Tertiary structural and thermal evolution of the Central Alps—compressional and extensional structures in an orogenic beltPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Symmagmatic folding of the base of the Bergell pluton, Central AlpsPublished by Elsevier ,1998
- Crustal structure beneath the eastern Swiss Alps derived from seismic refraction dataTectonophysics, 1995
- Styles of crustal deformation in compressional orogens caused by subduction of the underlying lithosphereTectonophysics, 1994
- From rifting to drifting: tectonic evolution of the South-Alpine upper crust from the Triassic to the Early CretaceousSedimentary Geology, 1993
- The strength of the continental crust, detachment zones and the development of plastic instabilitiesTectonophysics, 1989
- Crustal structure of the Southern Alps beneath the intersection with the European GeotraverseTectonophysics, 1986
- Tectonic progradation and plate tectonic evolution of the AlpsTectonophysics, 1979
- Structural zones and continental collision, Central AlpsTectonophysics, 1978