Temporal constraints on the kinematics of the destabilization of an orogen : syn- to post-orogenic extensional collapse of the Northern Aegean region
Publication date
1998
Authors
Lips, A.L.W.
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DOI
Document Type
Dissertation
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Abstract
The Mediterranean region is situated at the interface of the African and Eurasian plates and
has been shaped by the Alpine Orogeny and the subsequent post-orogenic extension during
the convergence and collision of the African and Eurasian plates. Numerous tectonic studies
have focussed on the role ofthe African - Eurasian interaction and its effect on the development
of the Mediterranean region. One of the prime areas where this interaction has been
investigated is the Aegean region in the Eastern Mediterranean. The study which is reported
in this thesis has investigated the tectonic development ofthe ductile Aegean crust which
was involved in the Alpine Orogeny and in its post-orogenic history. The aims of this thesis
are to obtain a detailed record of the Alpine kinematic history in the Pelagonian Zone in
the northern Aegean region, focussing on the timing of, and the interaction between, compressional
and extensional tectonics and on their effect on the development of the Aegean
region and to temporally constrain the correlation between the Alpine Orogeny and the
post-orogenic extension. The study will help to understand the geodynamic controls of the
extensional processes that have characterized the development of the Aegean orogenic
wedge. The aims have been achieved by combined field, microstructural and 4°Ar/39Ar
laserprobes studies of terrains of exposed Aegean basement, which have been metamorphosed
and ductily deformed during the Alpine Orogeny. The research has mainly focussed
on the Pelagonian Zone in the northwestern Aegean with additional field based studies in
the Rhodope Zone (northern Aegean) and Kazdag and Menderes Massifs (eastern Aegean).
The field based studies and 4°Ar/39Ar laserprobe dating of deformational fabrics from selected
samples have resulted in temporal constraints on the deformational and kinematic events
which affected the basement, when it was still positioned at ductile levels within the crust.
The wealth of published data from the Cyclades area and from Crete, in the central and
southern Aegean respectively, has been integrated with the results from this study to characterize
the Alpine tectonic development of the Aegean region, as a whole.