This paper deals with the regional stratigraphy around the whole Alps-Apennines junction during Late Eocene-Miocene times. The basin-fill architecture and its relation to changes in structural style which occurred through time, were deciphered through the integration of subsurface and outcrop data on the basis of seismic- and sequence-stratigraphy principles, respectively. During Late Eocene-Oligocene times, the study area hosted a mosaic of partially interconnected sub-basins, and the Torino Hill area marked the junction towards the western apex of the Southern Alps foredeep (Gonfolite Basin). Since the latest Oligocene, the uplift of the north-verging Monferrato arc provided the separation from the adjacent Gonfolite Basin and the Tertiary Piedmont Basin behaved as a larger and more regularly subsiding basin. The Upper Eocene-Miocene successions record a long-term, major transgressive-regressive cycle, consisting of seven large-scale unconformity-bounded stratigraphic units, whose stacking pattern was controlled by changes in the rate of tectonic subsidence and whose boundaries were generated by basin-modification phases. During the Oligocene-Lower Miocene deepening-upward sequence set, the SW-ward change of coastal onlap was punctuated by drowning-platform unconformities generated in relation to basinward tilting and high-angle synsedimentary faults. The maximum transgression coincides with the Late Burdigalian tectonic space creation phase, when a basinwide, highly efficient turbidite system was deposited. The Middle-Upper Miocene progradation, punctuated by forced regression pulses, was driven by the inversion and uplift of the southern basin margin, so that a northward shift and progressive narrowing of the turbidite depocentre occurred.

New outcrop and subsurface data in the Tertiary Piedmont Basin (NW-Italy): unconformity-bounded stratigraphic units and their relationships with basin-modification phases

Mosca Pietro;
2009

Abstract

This paper deals with the regional stratigraphy around the whole Alps-Apennines junction during Late Eocene-Miocene times. The basin-fill architecture and its relation to changes in structural style which occurred through time, were deciphered through the integration of subsurface and outcrop data on the basis of seismic- and sequence-stratigraphy principles, respectively. During Late Eocene-Oligocene times, the study area hosted a mosaic of partially interconnected sub-basins, and the Torino Hill area marked the junction towards the western apex of the Southern Alps foredeep (Gonfolite Basin). Since the latest Oligocene, the uplift of the north-verging Monferrato arc provided the separation from the adjacent Gonfolite Basin and the Tertiary Piedmont Basin behaved as a larger and more regularly subsiding basin. The Upper Eocene-Miocene successions record a long-term, major transgressive-regressive cycle, consisting of seven large-scale unconformity-bounded stratigraphic units, whose stacking pattern was controlled by changes in the rate of tectonic subsidence and whose boundaries were generated by basin-modification phases. During the Oligocene-Lower Miocene deepening-upward sequence set, the SW-ward change of coastal onlap was punctuated by drowning-platform unconformities generated in relation to basinward tilting and high-angle synsedimentary faults. The maximum transgression coincides with the Late Burdigalian tectonic space creation phase, when a basinwide, highly efficient turbidite system was deposited. The Middle-Upper Miocene progradation, punctuated by forced regression pulses, was driven by the inversion and uplift of the southern basin margin, so that a northward shift and progressive narrowing of the turbidite depocentre occurred.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/14137
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