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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Europe
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Southern Europe
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Italy
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Abruzzi Italy (1)
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Sicily Italy
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Madonie Mountains (1)
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Nebrodi Mountains (1)
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Mediterranean Sea
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West Mediterranean
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Tyrrhenian Sea (1)
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commodities
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petroleum (1)
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geologic age
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Cenozoic
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Neogene (1)
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Mesozoic
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Cretaceous (1)
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Primary terms
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Cenozoic
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Tertiary
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Neogene (1)
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deformation (2)
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Europe
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Southern Europe
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Italy
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Abruzzi Italy (1)
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Sicily Italy
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Madonie Mountains (1)
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Nebrodi Mountains (1)
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faults (3)
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folds (1)
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geodesy (1)
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geophysical methods (1)
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Mediterranean Sea
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West Mediterranean
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sedimentary rocks
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carbonate rocks
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grainstone (1)
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structural analysis (3)
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tectonics
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sedimentary rocks
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sedimentary rocks
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carbonate rocks
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grainstone (1)
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GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
Book Series
Date
Availability
Hydraulic properties of fault zones in porous carbonates, examples from central and southern Italy Available to Purchase
The southern Tyrrhenian Sea margin: an example of lithospheric scale strike-slip duplex Available to Purchase
Extensional deformations during Neogene chain building in Sicily Available to Purchase
Sequence of deformations in the Sicilidi units (northern Sicilian chain) Free
Composite structures resulting from negative inversion; an example from the Isle of Favignana (Egadi Islands) Free
Inverted structures in western Sicily Free
From Mesozoic extension to Tertiary collision; deformation patterns in the units of the north-western Sicilian chain Free
Repeated reactivation in the Apennine-Maghrebide system, Italy: A possible example of fault-zone weakening? Available to Purchase
Abstract Italy owes its complex geological structure to a double switch in tectonic regime, which involved the opening of the Tethys Ocean during Early Mesozoic time, its closure leading to development of the Apennine-Maghrebide fold-and-thrust belt during the Eocene-Recent interval, and the post-orogenic opening of the Tyrrhenian Sea since Miocene time. This history of tectonic inversion is partly preserved within two major fault zones, the Valnerina Line, in the central Apennines, and the Gratteri-Mount Mufara Line, in centrai-northern Sicily, which were repeatedly reactivated with different kinematic characters. The relatively long life of these structures indicates that strain was localized along anisotropies inherited from early deformation episodes. However, the progressive widening of both fault zones through time may result from strain-hardening fault-rock behaviour during subsequent deformations, thus suggesting that fault reactivation does not imply fault-zone weakening as is often assumed.