Basement-involved reactivation in foreland fold and thrust belts: the Alpine-Carpathian Junction (Austria)

Publication date

2016-09-16T12:37:04Z

2017-02-24T23:01:26Z

2016-02-24

2016-09-16T12:37:09Z

Abstract

The Late Eocene to Early Miocene Alpine-Carpathian fold-and-thrust belt (FTB) lies in the transition between the Eastern Alps and the Western Carpathians, southeast of the Bohemian crystalline massif. Our study shows the involvement of crystalline basement from the former European Jurassic continental margin in two distinct events: a first extensional event coeval with Eggerian to Karpatian (ca. 28-16 Ma) thin-skinned thrusting reactivated the rift basement fault array and resulted from the large degree of lower plate bending promoted by high lateral gradients of lithospheric strength and slab pull forces. Slab-break off during the final stages of collision around Karpatian times (ca. 17-16 Ma) promoted large wavelength uplift and an excessive topographic load. This load was reduced by broadening the orogenic wedge through the reactivation of the lower plate deep detachment beneath and ahead of the thin-skinned thrust front (with the accompanying positive inversion of the basement fault array) and ultimately, by the collapse of the hinterland summits enhanced by transtensional faulting. Although this work specifically deals with the involvement of the basement in the Alpine-Carpathian Junction, the main conclusions are of general interest to the understanding of orogenic systems

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

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Reproducció del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0016756816000066

Geological Magazine, 2016

http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0016756816000066

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(c) Cambridge University Press, 2016

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