Eocene rotation of Sardinia, and the paleogeography of the western Mediterranean region

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Publication date

2014-09-01

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Advokaat, Eldert L.ORCID 0000-0001-8239-0310ISNI 0000000493228580
van Hinsbergen, Douwe J.J.ORCID 0000-0003-3410-0344ISNI 0000000065827851
Maffione, MarcoISNI 0000000506825991
Langereis, C. G.ORCID 0000-0001-9232-2178ISNI 0000000032917519
Vissers, Reinoud L.m.ISNI 0000000066498180
Cherchi, A.
Schroeder, R.
Madani, H.
Columbu, S.

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Abstract

Key to understanding the complex Mediterranean subduction history is the kinematic reconstruction of its paleogeography after Jurassic extension between Iberia, Eurasia, and Africa. While post-Eocene Liguro-Provençal back-arc extension, and associated Miocene ~50° counterclockwise (ccw) rotation of Sardinia-Corsica have been well documented, pre-Oligocene reconstructions suffer uncertainties related to the position of Sardinia-Corsica with respect to Iberia. If a previously constrained major post-middle Jurassic, pre-Oligocene rotation of Sardinia-Corsica can be quantified in time, we can test the hypothesis that Sardinia-Corsica was (or was not) part of Iberia, which underwent a ~35° ccw during the Aptian (121-112 Ma). Here, we present new paleomagnetic results from Triassic, Jurassic, Upper Cretaceous and Lower Eocene carbonate rocks from Sardinia. Our results show a consistent well constrained post-early Eocene to pre-Oligocene ~45° ccw rotation of Sardinia-Corsica relative to Eurasia. This rotation postdated the Iberian rotation, and unambiguously shows that the two domains must have been separated by a (transform) plate boundary. The Eocene rotation of Sardinia-Corsica was synchronous with and likely responsible for documented N-S shortening in the Provence and the incorporation of the Briançonnais continental domain, likely connected to Corsica, into the western Alps. We argue that this rotation resulted from the interplay between a southward 'Alpine' subduction zone at Corsica, retreating northward, and a northward subduction zone below Sardinia, remaining relatively stationary versus Eurasia.

Keywords

Sardinia, Corsica, Briançonnais, Iberia, paleomagnetism

Citation

Advokaat, E, van Hinsbergen, D J J, Maffione, M, Langereis, C G, Vissers, R L M, Cherchi, A, Schroeder, R, Madani, H & Columbu, S 2014, 'Eocene rotation of Sardinia, and the paleogeography of the western Mediterranean region', Earth and Planetary Science Letters, vol. 401, pp. 183-195. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2014.06.012