In the central part of the External Ligurian Briançonnais in the Ligurian Alps (NW Italy), a large and diverse set of stratigraphic, sedimentologic and petrographic data provides evidence for the occurrence of Cretaceous kilometre-scale palaeoescarpments. These palaeoescarpments consist of irregular erosional surfaces more or less deeply incising a stratigraphic succession that ranges from Upper Jurassic limestones down to Permian volcano-sedimentary rocks; at present they are partly exposed and partly covered by Upper Cretaceous- Upper Eocene sediments, and patchily encrusted by authigenic minerals. Palaeoescarpments resulted from the remodelling of palaeofault planes by gravity-driven rock fall processes, whose products are represented by breccias and metre- to tens of metres-sized blocks of Upper Jurassic limestones either lying directly over the surfaces or embedded within onlapping sediments. Palaeofault-related tensional stresses are also docu- mented by the occurrence of subvertical sedimentary neptunian dykes and tabular breccia bodies, inter- preted as fault rocks and locally bearing evidence of the uprise of hot, overpressured fluids. Fault activity started during the Aptian, with most of the displacement--which locally reached several hundred metres-- accomplished during the Late Cretaceous, resulting in deep morpho-structural depressions that, by Eocene times, were not yet levelled out. Two systems of kilometre-long palaeoescarpments are recognized and mapped, suggesting the existence of a Cretaceous kilometre-sized fault-bounded basin limited to the north and south by two main transcurrent zones, presently striking E-W and internally partitioned by N-S oriented east-dipping normal faults. This type of setting could be consistent with the Western Tethys tectonic context, in which the Ligurian Briançonnais Domain, close to the Early-Late Cretaceous boundary, was located at the easternmost end of a transcurrent belt connecting the Bay of Biscay to the Valais and Ligurian-Piedmont oceans.
Kilometre-scale paleoescarpments as evidence for Cretaceous synsedimentary tectonics in the External Briançonnais Domain (Ligurian Alps, Italy)
PIANA F
2012
Abstract
In the central part of the External Ligurian Briançonnais in the Ligurian Alps (NW Italy), a large and diverse set of stratigraphic, sedimentologic and petrographic data provides evidence for the occurrence of Cretaceous kilometre-scale palaeoescarpments. These palaeoescarpments consist of irregular erosional surfaces more or less deeply incising a stratigraphic succession that ranges from Upper Jurassic limestones down to Permian volcano-sedimentary rocks; at present they are partly exposed and partly covered by Upper Cretaceous- Upper Eocene sediments, and patchily encrusted by authigenic minerals. Palaeoescarpments resulted from the remodelling of palaeofault planes by gravity-driven rock fall processes, whose products are represented by breccias and metre- to tens of metres-sized blocks of Upper Jurassic limestones either lying directly over the surfaces or embedded within onlapping sediments. Palaeofault-related tensional stresses are also docu- mented by the occurrence of subvertical sedimentary neptunian dykes and tabular breccia bodies, inter- preted as fault rocks and locally bearing evidence of the uprise of hot, overpressured fluids. Fault activity started during the Aptian, with most of the displacement--which locally reached several hundred metres-- accomplished during the Late Cretaceous, resulting in deep morpho-structural depressions that, by Eocene times, were not yet levelled out. Two systems of kilometre-long palaeoescarpments are recognized and mapped, suggesting the existence of a Cretaceous kilometre-sized fault-bounded basin limited to the north and south by two main transcurrent zones, presently striking E-W and internally partitioned by N-S oriented east-dipping normal faults. This type of setting could be consistent with the Western Tethys tectonic context, in which the Ligurian Briançonnais Domain, close to the Early-Late Cretaceous boundary, was located at the easternmost end of a transcurrent belt connecting the Bay of Biscay to the Valais and Ligurian-Piedmont oceans.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.