Applying thick-skinned tectonic models to the Apennine thrust belt of Italy: limitations and implications
Chapter
Publication Date:
2004
abstract:
Fold-thrust belts are commonly interpreted as ''thin-skinned'' structures, developed
above a detachment, with the underlying basement remaining undeformed.
However, inmany areas, particularlywhere compressional tectonismwas preceded
by rifting, models of basement fault reactivation may be more appropriate. The contrasts
between thin-skinned and deep-rooting, inversion-dominated deformation in
building fold-thrust complexes are investigated using a case history from the Italian
Apennines. Three sectors were chosen to represent the marked lateral variations in
structural style evident in the thrust belt. The outer portion of the Marche (in the north)
is contrasted with a section through the Lucanian Apennines in the south and with the
Molise district of the Central Apennines. The Marche structures are readily explained in
terms of inversion, a model that is consistent with new deep seismic data onshore and
conventional seismic from the nearby Adriatic Sea. The displacements implicit for the
inversion model are a factor of five less than for existing thin-skinned interpretations.
However, these styles are not applicable throughout the Apennines. Well data in the
Southern Apennines of Lucania demonstrate large-scale thin-skinned thrusting, with
57 km of horizontal displacement since earliest Pliocene time. This includes 14 km of
shortening that ramps up through the buried Apulian Platformcarbonates. These deeper
structures may be restored using ramp-dominated thrust geometries. The Molise sector
shows broadly the same structural style as for Lucania: allochthonous shallow-water
carbonates and pelagic basin units overlie the carbonates of the Apulian Platform, with
the major difference being that here, the pelagic basin units are detached at the level of
the Oligocene-lower Miocene Argille Varicolori. In this setting, the Apulian carbonates
may be restored using only 5 km of displacement. The overlying allochthon probably
has accommodated about 45 km of displacement since the earliest Pliocene. Therefore,
the Apennines show differing structural styles with differing displacements along their
length. Thick-skinned thrusting models may be applied to the Marche and to structures
in the buried Apulian units.
Iris type:
02.01 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
List of contributors:
Scrocca, Davide
Book title:
Thrust tectonics and hydrocarbon systems
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