Yayınlanmış 1 Ocak 2024 | Sürüm v1
Dergi makalesi Açık

Late Mesozoic Tectono-stratigraphic evolution of the Hekimhan Basin and the environs (central eastern Anatolia): implications for the eastern Taurides and Gurun Curl

  • 1. Dokuz Eylul Univ, Engn Fac, Dept Geol Engn, Izmir, Turkiye
  • 2. Karadeniz Tech Univ, Engn Fac, Dept Geol Engn, Trabzon, Turkiye
  • 3. Univ Southampton, Natl Oceanog Ctr, Sch Ocean & Earth Sci, Southampton, England

Açıklama

The east-west trending Taurides form a curved area in central eastern Anatolia known as the Gurun Curl. In order to understand the origin of the Gurun Curl and Tauride evolution in general, the results of a new field study of this region have been synthesized together with previously published data. We suggest that the geodynamic evolution of the area began with the likely presence of a Tethys Ocean transform fault. This fault separated the Taurides into the Akdere Sector in the west and the Munzur Sector in the east in the Late Cretaceous. During the late Santonian-early Campanian, ophiolites obducted onto the Munzur Sector, while platform sediments continued to accumulate in the Akdere Sector. This was followed by the development of an Andean-type arc-type magmatism (the Baskil Arc) during the early-middle Campanian in the Munzur Sector. Continued closure of the Tethys led to the collision of the Bitlis Massif in the south of the Munzur Sector in the Campanian. This, in turn, resulted in continental subduction and slab roll-back that was controlled by a Subduction Transform Edge Propagator (STEP) Fault that lay on the original transform fault between the Akdere and Munzur sectors. Because the subducted slab was free at its western corner, the western edge rolled back faster than in the east, leading to an asymmetrical extensional regime on the upper plate that created the late Campanian Hekimhan Basin. While these geodynamic events were taking place in the Munzur Sector, the Akdere Sector was in a platform setting. During the Palaeocene, the Late Mesozoic units of the Akdere Sector began to overthrust on the Hekimhan Basin and the ophiolites. Following the Palaeocene, all these tectonostratigraphic units were covered by Eocene sediments around the Gurun Curl of which the modern appearance was completed by the Miocene to Recent movements along the strike-slip faults.

Dosyalar

bib-7d7f1e32-f149-4d9d-9a64-1ff47ee9ab0f.txt

Dosyalar (280 Bytes)

Ad Boyut Hepisini indir
md5:8654542b01f5d53e0735d4be6879e1b4
280 Bytes Ön İzleme İndir