Mesoscopic structural measurements near the top and bottom of the Pennine Zone in the Central Alps of eastern Switzerland indicate multiple, spatially heterogeneous directions of Tertiary movement relative to the Austroalpine allochthon above and the Helvetic zone below. At the top of the Pennine Zone in the Oberhalbstein Valley, motion varies mainly from top-E to top-SSE. At the bottom of the Pennine Zone in the Val Lumnezia area, Ultrahelvetic units exhibit distributed top-NW and top-N shear overprinted by relatively brittle top-NE shear localized just beneath the contact with Penninic units in the Peidener shear zone, which we interpret largely to postdate juxtaposition of Penninic and Helvetic units. Where observed in the Chur Rhine Valley, just 35 km ENE of Val Lumnezia, movement within the basal Pennine units is exclusively top-N. The contrast in movement directions, from top-N to top-NW at the base, to top-E to -SSE at the top, supports the interpretation, drawn from thermochronological data, that the Pennine Zone was tectonically interposed between Adria and Europe as a 20-km-thick “piston” or “mega-pip” from ca. 29 to 18 Ma, driven by its buoyancy contrast with surrounding deep crust and mantle. Emplacement occurred after “docking” of Adria with cratonic Europe at ca. 35 Ma (i.e., continent-continent collision), raising the question of whether the formation of Alpine nappe structure, high Alpine topography, and the peripheral Molasse and Lombardy basins require significant coeval plate convergence.
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September 01, 2021
Plate Tectonics and the Alpine Orogeny: Implications of Thermometric and Kinematic Analyses of the Upper and Lower Boundaries of the Pennine Zone in the Central Alps Available to Purchase
Jason B. Price;
1.
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, 1200 East California Boulevard, Pasadena, California 91125, USA2.
Ibex Exploration, 1861 South Youngfield Court, Lakewood, Colorado 80228, USA*
Author for correspondence; email: [email protected].
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Brian P. Wernicke
Brian P. Wernicke
1.
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, 1200 East California Boulevard, Pasadena, California 91125, USA
Search for other works by this author on:
1.
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, 1200 East California Boulevard, Pasadena, California 91125, USA2.
Ibex Exploration, 1861 South Youngfield Court, Lakewood, Colorado 80228, USA
Brian P. Wernicke
1.
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, 1200 East California Boulevard, Pasadena, California 91125, USA*
Author for correspondence; email: [email protected].
Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
Received:
15 Dec 2020
Accepted:
16 Dec 2020
First Online:
03 Nov 2023
Online ISSN: 1537-5269
Print ISSN: 0022-1376
© 2021 The University of Chicago. All rights reserved.
The University of Chicago
The Journal of Geology (2021) 129 (5): 499–531.
Article history
Received:
15 Dec 2020
Accepted:
16 Dec 2020
First Online:
03 Nov 2023
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CitationJason B. Price, Brian P. Wernicke; Plate Tectonics and the Alpine Orogeny: Implications of Thermometric and Kinematic Analyses of the Upper and Lower Boundaries of the Pennine Zone in the Central Alps. The Journal of Geology 2021;; 129 (5): 499–531. doi: https://doi.org/10.1086/716497
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Index Terms/Descriptors
- absolute age
- Alpine Orogeny
- Alps
- Austroalpine Zone
- brittle deformation
- Cenozoic
- Central Alps
- Central Europe
- crustal thickening
- deformation
- ductile deformation
- Eastern Alps
- emplacement
- Europe
- fabric
- fault zones
- faults
- fission-track dating
- geochronology
- geologic thermometry
- imbricate tectonics
- Italy
- kinematics
- kinetics
- Lombardy Italy
- Molasse Basin
- normal faults
- Oberhalbstein
- orogeny
- Penninic Zone
- plate tectonics
- Rhine Valley
- slabs
- Southern Europe
- structural analysis
- Switzerland
- tectonics
- tectonostratigraphic units
- Tertiary
- (U-Th)/He
- Helvetic Zone
- Val Lumnezia
- Martegnas shear zone
- Peidener shear zone
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