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Tectonometamorphic evolution of the ophiolitic sequences from northern Calabrian Arc

Francesca Liberi and Eugenio Piluso
Tectonometamorphic evolution of the ophiolitic sequences from northern Calabrian Arc (in Alps and Apennines; a natural laboratory of structural geology and geodynamics; papers presented at the International meeting in honour of Gaetano Giglia and Tonino Decandia, Giovanni Capponi (editor), Michele Marroni (editor), Enrico Tavarnelli (editor) and Fernando Calamita (editor))
Italian Journal of Geosciences (June 2009) 128 (2): 483-493

Abstract

Ophiolites crop out discontinuously in the Northern Calabrian Arc (Southern Italy). They consist of high pressure/low temperature metamorphic ophiolitic sequences of Late Jurassic-?Early Cretaceous age, in which a metabasic and metaultramafic association is the base of a complex metasedimentary cover ranging from pelagic to flyschoid type sediments. These ophiolitic sequences, interpreted as slices of oceanic lithosphere belonging to the Jurassic Tethys realm, occupy an intermediate position in the northern Calabrian Arc nappe pile, between the overlying Hercynian continental lithosphere (Calabride nappe) and the underlying Apenninic carbonate units. In the literature, these ophiolitic sequences are subdivided into several tectonometamorphic units; some authors distinguished between an upper slightly metamorphic ophiolitic unit and a lower HP-metamorphic ophiolitic unit. This subdivision contrasts with new petrological data and geothermobarometric modelling. In fact, the overall P-T evolution for several ophiolitic sequences from the northern Calabrian arc describes comparable paths, characterized by a HP-LT metamorphism followed by retrogression under green-schist facies conditions. The metamorphic climax is calculated at pressures ranging between 0,9 and 1,1 GPa and a temperature around 380 degrees C. Moreover, structural analysis of rocks characterized by HP synmetamorphic ductile deformation suggests that tectonic evolution is quite homogeneous and similar, although different degrees of deformation can be observed. The high-pressure mineral assemblage defines a pervasive foliation developed during a compressive tectonic event (D (sub 1) ) that transposed the earlier structures. A second tectonic event (D (sub 2) ) which occurred during decompression at 0,4 GPa, produced millimetre to decametre scale asymmetric folds. Later extensional brittle structures are responsible for final exhumation of the HP rocks. The tectonometamorphic evolution of the ophiolitic sequences of Northern Calabrian Arc is well explained in a context in which the oceanic-derived rocks underwent subduction and exhumation as tectonic slices inside an accretionary wedge.


ISSN: 2038-1719
Coden: BOGIAT
Serial Title: Italian Journal of Geosciences
Serial Volume: 128
Serial Issue: 2
Title: Tectonometamorphic evolution of the ophiolitic sequences from northern Calabrian Arc
Title: Alps and Apennines; a natural laboratory of structural geology and geodynamics; papers presented at the International meeting in honour of Gaetano Giglia and Tonino Decandia
Author(s): Liberi, FrancescaPiluso, Eugenio
Author(s): Capponi, Giovannieditor
Author(s): Marroni, Micheleeditor
Author(s): Tavarnelli, Enricoeditor
Author(s): Calamita, Fernandoeditor
Affiliation: Universita della Calabria, Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Arcavacata di Rende, Italy
Pages: 483-493
Published: 200906
Text Language: English
Summary Language: Italian
Publisher: Societa Geologica Italiana, Rome, Italy
Meeting name: Alps and Apennines; a natural laboratory of structural geology and geodynamics; International meeting in honour of Gaetano Giglia and Tonino Decandia
Meeting location: Pisa, ITA, Italy
Meeting date: 20071025Oct. 25-26, 2007
References: 73
Accession Number: 2011-009274
Categories: Igneous and metamorphic petrologyStructural geology
Document Type: Serial Conference document
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 2 tables, geol. sketch map
N38°00'00" - N40°10'00", E15°45'00" - E17°00'00"
Country of Publication: Italy
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute.
Update Code: 201106
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