Tectonic evolution of the Cretaceous Ankara Ophiolitic Mélange during the Late Cretaceous to pre-Miocene interval in Central Anatolia, Turkey

2013 ◽  
Vol 65 ◽  
pp. 66-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bora Rojay
GeoArabia ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adel R Moustafa ◽  
Ati Saoudi ◽  
Alaa Moubasher ◽  
Ibrahim M Ibrahim ◽  
Hesham Molokhia ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT An integrated surface mapping and subsurface study of the Bahariya Depression aided the regional subsurface interpretation. It indicated that four major ENE-oriented structural belts overlie deep-seated faults in this part of the ‘tectonically stable’ area of Egypt. The rocks of the Bahariya area were deformed in the Late Cretaceous, post-Middle Eocene, and Middle Miocene-and subsurface data indicated an early Mesozoic phase of normal faulting. The Late Cretaceous and post-Middle Eocene deformations reactivated the early normal faults by oblique slip and formed a large swell in the Bahariya region. The crest was continuously eroded whereas its peripheries were onlapped by Maastrichtian and Tertiary sediments. The tectonic evolution of the Bahariya region shows great similarity to the deformation of the ‘tectonically unstable’ area of the northern Western Desert where several hydrocarbon fields have been discovered. This similarity may indicate that the same phases of deformation could extend to other basins lying in the ‘tectonically stable’ area, such as the Asyut, Dakhla, Nuqura, and El Misaha basins.


1986 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 1-46
Author(s):  
Ole Valdemar Vejbæk

The Lower Cretaceous sequence of the Danish Central Trough has been studied by the use of seismic stratigraphic analysis. The sequence has been subdivided into 6 seismic stratigraphic units named LCA, LCB, LCC, LCD, LCE and LCF. The studied area includes the Feda Graben, the Gertrud Graben (new name), the Tail End Graben, the Arne-Elin Graben (new name) and the Salt Dome Province, whereas the Grensen Nose and the Outer Rough Basin are not included. These basins are separated by the Inge High, the Mads High, the Gert Ridge (new name), the Manda! High, the Heno Plateau (new name) and the Pollerne Ridge (new name). The fault controlled subsidence of the Lower Cretaceous basins is claimed to have been governed by left lateral transtensional wrenching. This wrenching gradually ceased and gave way to regional subsidence with intermittent events of inversion resulting from right lateral transpressive wrenching in the Late Cretaceous and Early Tertiary. The first weak inversion is shown to have occurred in the Late Hauterivian. Sedimentation was influenced by a general gradual relative rise in sea-level starting with a low in the Volgian - Early Ryazanian times coeval with the deposition of the Farsund Formation and culminating in the Late Cretaceous. At the beginning of the Early Cretaceous gravity flow became an important depositional mechanism and resulted in preferred deposition in topographical lows, which were generated by simple tensional block-faulting or by wrench-induced, rapid local subsidence. As tectonic activity decreased and the elastic source areas became more remote and worn down, depocentres became less pronounced, especially with the last unit of the Lower Cretaceous.


Author(s):  
Yucel Yilmaz

The island of Cyprus constitutes a fragment of southern Anatolia separated from the mainland by left-oblique transtension in late Cenozoic time. However, a geological framework of offset features of the south-central Anatolia, for comparison of Cyprus with a source region within and west of the southeastern Anatolian suture zone, has not yet been developed. In this paper, I enumerate, describe, and compare a full suite of potentially correlative spatial and temporal elements exposed in both regions. Northern Cyprus and south-central Anatolia have identical tectonostratigraphic units. At the base of both belts, crop out ophiolitic mélange-accretionary complex generated during the northward subduction of the NeoTethyan Oceanic lithosphere from the Late Cretaceous until the end of middle Eocene. The nappes of the Taurus carbonate platform were thrust above this internally chaotic unit during late Eocene. They began to move as a coherent nappe pile from that time onward. An asymmetrical flysch basin was formed in front of this southward moving nappe pile during the early Miocene. The nappes were then thrust over the flysch basin fill and caused its tight folding. Cyprus separated from Anatolia in the Pleistocene-Holocene when, transtensional oblique faults with dip-slip components caused the development of the Adana and Iskenderun basins and the separation of Cyprus from Anatolia.


2018 ◽  
Vol 87 ◽  
pp. 139-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sofía B. Iannelli ◽  
Lucas M. Fennell ◽  
Vanesa D. Litvak ◽  
Lucía Fernández Paz ◽  
Alfonso Encinas ◽  
...  

1994 ◽  
Vol 31 (5) ◽  
pp. 824-834 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohsen Arvin ◽  
Paul T. Robinson

A Late Cretaceous ophiolite complex in the Baft area, southwest of Kerman, Iran, is characteristic of the Central Iranian Ophiolitic Mélange Belt, which wraps around the Lut Block. Despite the extensive tectonic disruption of the Baft complex, most ophiolitic lithologies are present and many original igneous contacts are preserved. A lack of cumulate gabbros within the sequence suggests that a large and continuous magma chamber did not exist beneath the Baft spreading axis. Geochemical data confirm the presence of two distinct compositional groups in the mafic lavas: (1) tholeiitic basalt and (2) transitional tholeiitic basalt. The tholeiitic lavas are similar to typical mid-ocean-ridge basalt compositions, whereas the transitional tholeiites are similar to intraplate basalts. The available data suggest that the Baft ophiolite complex formed in a small ocean basin, possibly at or near a ridge–transform intersection. Emplacement may have occurred as a result of conversion of the transform fault to a subduction zone during a change in relative plate motion. A ridge–transform setting is compatible with the intraplate character of some of the transitional basalts, which probably represent off-axis (seamount) magmatism, marked by the absence of cumulate gabbros and the presence of a serpentinite mélange cut by basaltic dykes. The ridge–transform model suggests formation of the ophiolite in a narrow ocean basin separating the Sanandaj-Sirjan microcontinent from the Central Iran Block in Late Cretaceous time.


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