Rift migration and lateral propagation: evolution of normal faults and sediment-routing systems of the western Corinth rift (Greece)
Capitolo di libro
Data di Pubblicazione:
2017
Abstract:
The active Corinth rift records hanging-wall migration of faulting and slip-rate acceleration.
The rift initiated at approximately 5-4 Ma, and older parts are well exposed in the northern
Peloponnese. A new correlation of chrono- and lithostratigraphy and structure across the onland
central to westernmost rift with offshore data reveals westward rift propagation, as well as northward
fault migration. Northward fault migration ended first in the east, with the stabilization of
major north-dipping faults that now bound the Gulf. The basin then propagated to the WNW in
two stages, each involving the initiation of a new fault that propagated east to SE to link to the stable
fault system. Extension rates accelerated in distinct steps as the rift opened to the west. The
youngest faults in the westernmost rift are associated with high seismicity and highest geodetic
extension due to rapid fault growth and linkage at depth.
The early synrift succession infilled substantial inherited palaeo-relief. Antecedent rivers established
vigorous sediment-routing systems that controlled facies distribution throughout rifting,
albeit with drainage reorganization during fault-migration events. Multiple deepening events
recorded in the stratigraphy can be due to lateral rift propagation. The transition from rift initiation
to rift climax is, therefore, diachronous along the rift axis.
Tipologia CRIS:
02.01 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
Keywords:
Rift Basin; Normal fault; Corinth Rift; Greece; Pliocene; Quaternary
Elenco autori:
Mancini, Marco
Link alla scheda completa:
Titolo del libro:
The Geometry and Growth of Normal Faults
Pubblicato in: