Exhumation of metamorphic rocks in N Aegean: the path from shortening to extension and extrusion
Résumé
The Olympos-Ossa-Pelion (OOP) ranges, in NW Aegean, encompass Greece highest summit and are located near the extremity of the North Anatolian Fault (NAF). Structural and thermochronological data gathered in the OOP ranges show that the main exhumation of metamorphic nappes occurred in the Eocene, at ca. 43-39 Ma. This early exhumation, associated with ductile, then brittle-ductile normal faulting with northeastward transport, is nearly coeval with orogenic shortening in the close area. Cooling rates, and likely exhumation, have been low between ~40 Ma and ~20 Ma. 40Ar/39Ar crystallization ages (between 20 and 15 Ma) appears related to brittle-ductile normal faulting and likely associated with the onset of Aegean back-arc extension. The dating of a diabase dyke, and the geometry of associated brittle jointing, of onshore and offshore active normal faults imply a shift in extension direction after 4 Ma. Such a shift is probably related the propagation of the NAF in northern Aegean known to have occurred around 5 Ma.
Domaines
Sciences de la Terre
Origine : Accord explicite pour ce dépôt