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Kastens, Kim et al. (1988): ODP leg 107 in the Tyrrhenian Sea; insights into passive margin and back-arc basin evolution
Leg/Site/Hole:
Related Expeditions:
ODP 107
Identifier:
ID:
1988-046785
Type:
georefid
ID:
10.1130/0016-7606(1988)100<1140:OLITTS>2.3.CO;2
Type:
doi
Creator:
Name:
Kastens, Kim
Affiliation:
Lamont-Doherty Geol. Obs., Palisades, NY, United States
Role:
author
Name:
Mascle, Jean
Affiliation:
Univ. Pierre et Marie Curie, France
Role:
author
Name:
Auroux, Christian A.
Affiliation:
Tex. A&M Univ., United States
Role:
author
Name:
Bonatti, Enrico
Affiliation:
Univ. Fla., United States
Role:
author
Name:
Broglia, Cristina
Affiliation:
Ist. Geol. Mar., Italy
Role:
author
Name:
Channell, James
Affiliation:
Univ. Provence, France
Role:
author
Name:
Curzi, Pietro
Affiliation:
Tohoku Univ., Japan
Role:
author
Name:
Emeis, Kay-Christian
Affiliation:
Tech. Univ. Muenchen, Federal Republic of Germany
Role:
author
Name:
Glacon, Georgette
Affiliation:
Inst. Dolomieu, France
Role:
author
Name:
Hasegawa, Shiro
Affiliation:
Mass. Inst. Technol., United States
Role:
author
Name:
Hieke, Werner
Affiliation:
Univ. Frankfurt, Federal Republic of Germany
Role:
author
Name:
Mascle, Georges
Affiliation:
Univ. Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Role:
author
Name:
McCoy, Floyd
Affiliation:
Ist. Geol., Italy
Role:
author
Name:
McKenzie, Judith
Affiliation:
Kyoto Univ., Japan
Role:
author
Name:
Mendelson, James
Affiliation:
Role:
author
Name:
Mueller, Carla
Affiliation:
Role:
author
Name:
Rehault, Jean-Pierre
Affiliation:
Role:
author
Name:
Robertson, Alastair
Affiliation:
Role:
author
Name:
Sartori, Renzo
Affiliation:
Role:
author
Name:
Sprovieri, Rodolfo
Affiliation:
Role:
author
Name:
Torii, Masayuki
Affiliation:
Role:
author
Identification:
Title:
ODP leg 107 in the Tyrrhenian Sea; insights into passive margin and back-arc basin evolution
Year:
1988
Source:
Geological Society of America Bulletin
Publisher:
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
Volume:
100
Issue:
7
Pages:
1140-1156
Abstract:
Leg 107 of the Ocean Drilling Program drilled a west-northwest-east-southeast transect of seven sites across the Tyrrhenian Sea, the youngest of the sub-basins of the Mediterranean Sea. Sites 654, 653, 652, and 656 document the rifting and subsidence of the Sardinia passive continental margin. On the upper margin (Site 654), we cored a classic transgressive sequence: subaerial conglomerates, overlain by oyster-bearing sands, overlain by marine marl. Comparison between the recovered lithologies and seismic reflection profiles suggests that the synrift sediments on the upper margin are Tortonian (late Miocene) to Messinian (latest Miocene) in age, whereas synrift sediments on the lower margin are Messinian to Pliocene in age. During the Messinian desiccation of the Mediterranean, Sites 654 and 653, now on the upper Sardinian margin, apparently occupied a basinal setting, where they received nannoplankton-bearing clays interbedded with laminated gypsum. Sites 656 and 652, now on the lower Sardinia margin, were apparently higher standing during the desiccation event; their Messinian facies are subaerial and lacustrine, respectively. We infer from these lines of evidence that tilting and subsidence occurred more than a million years earlier on the upper margin than on the lower margin. Such diachroneity can be interpreted in terms of migration of the zone of maximum extension above a "rolling-back" subduction zone, or in terms of extension of continental crust, by shear along a deep "detachment fault."Sites 655, 651, and 650 were drilled into two small basalt-floored basins of the central and eastern Tyrrhenian. Emplacement of basaltic crust in the central Tyrrhenian (Vavilov Basin) apparently began more than a million years before, emplacement of basaltic crust in the eastern Tyrrhenian (Marsili Basin). This observation is compatible with previous suggestions that the Tyrrhenian has grown southeastward in response to "rollback" of the down-going slab that currently dips northwestward under the toe of Italy. At the easternmost site, high vesicularity of the basalt and benthic foram assemblages in the oldest sediments imply that the basalt erupted in water shallower than 2,500 m. It has apparently subsequently subsided to its present depth of >4,100 m below sea level nearly three times as fast as normal subsidence of crust formed at a mid-ocean ridge.
Language:
English
Genre:
Serial
Rights:
URL:
Coverage:
Geographic coordinates:
North:41.0000
West:10.3000
East: 14.0000
South:39.0000
Keywords:
Solid-earth geophysics; Oceanography; back-arc basins; basins; Cenozoic; composition; continental margin; cores; Deep Sea Drilling Project; geophysical methods; geophysical surveys; Leg 107; lithostratigraphy; marine sediments; Mediterranean region; Mediterranean Sea; Neogene; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; oceanography; passive margins; plate tectonics; sediments; seismic methods; surveys; tectonophysics; Tertiary; Tyrrhenian Sea; West Mediterranean;
.
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