Multichannel seismic reflection profiles, gravity measurements, and bathymetric soundings, in conjunction with field geological reconnaissance and remote sensing images, reveal with unprecedented detail the morphostructure of a major segment of the South America–Scotia plate boundary in the Tierra del Fuego region. This segment, known as the Magallanes‐Fagnano fault system, is a continental transform margin arranged in an en echelon geometry, along which prominent asymmetric basins were developed. Data acquired off the Atlantic coast of Isla Grande (the main island of Tierra del Fuego), in its central and eastern part, and in the central and western Magallanes Strait image the surface and subsurface structure of the transform fault and its associated basins. The Magallanes‐Fagnano fault system is composed of distinct tectonic lineaments that are segments of the transform system and are represented by mostly near‐vertical faults. In the Atlantic sector, the fault system trends broadly N70°E and seems to be composed by a single master fault, along which a highly asymmetric basin has formed. At around 63°W, the fault terminates by splaying into secondary normal faults that dissipate the horizontal displacement along the system. In the central eastern part of Isla Grande, the fault segments have been principally identified from analyses of remote sensing images on the basis of their morphological expression. These segments are located within river valleys and are generally associated with localized gravity minima. Lago Fagnano, a 105‐km‐long, E‐W trending depression, is a large, mostly asymmetric pull‐apart basin developed within the principal displacement zone of the Magallanes‐Fagnano fault system. Restraining bends and overlapping step‐over geometry characterize the central part of the Magallanes Strait. Along the western part of the fault system, in the vicinity of the Pacific entrance of the Magallanes Strait, asymmetric sedimentary basins have also developed. The sedimentary architecture of the basins formed within the principal displacement zone of the fault, in which the thick end of the depositional wedge abuts the transform segment, suggest simultaneous strike‐slip motion and transform‐normal extension, a common feature found in other continental transtensional environments. Strike‐slip faulting in the Tierra del Fuego region is also documented along other prominent lineaments which parallel the Magallanes‐Fagnano fault system. Along at least two of these lineaments, characterized by a remarkable morphological expression, widespread Quaternary activity occurs. The present‐day motion between the South America and Scotia plates is slow (<5 mm/yr). Also the modern seismicity monitored in the Tierra del Fuego region is low (individual events <3.5 in magnitude). The low seismicity may be explained by the slow relative motion between plates and may be further affected by slip partitioning along the different segments which make up the Magallanes‐Fagnano fault array, and along the subsidiary wrench lineaments that...
The North Tyrrhenian-Northern Apennines post-collisional system (NTAS) has been analysed on the basis of marine reflection profiles and bibliographic sources with the aim of providing an up-to-date geotectonic and evolutive framework consistent with structural data. The continental rifting began to affect the most internal (western) side of the system in the middle (?)-upper Miocene, while the most external (eastern) zones were touched by rifting only in Pleistocene times. The birth and development of extensive, asymmetric basins took place with a progressive speeding up of rifting towards the external sectors.A diachronous, regionally extended and eastward rejuvenating unconformity, recognizable within the Neogen-aternary basins, marks the passage from the syn-rift to the post-rift tectonic regime. While the first is everywhere dominated by extension, the second one produces vertical movements. Reflection terminations related to this unconformity are intei-preted in terms of vertical tectonic component. Three zones that experienced different post-rift vertical movements are thus recognized in the NTAS: subsidence in the North Tyrrhenian deep water region; tectonic stability or alternation of moderate subsidence and uplift in the continental shelf and western Tuscany, strong uplift in eastern Tuscany.The updated structural data demonstrate that the NTAS upper crust is crosscut by both Tyrrhenian-dipping and Apennine-dipping lowangle detachment planes, above which the upper crustal blocks rotated and experienced extensional transport along two opposite directions: to the west and to the east, respectively. The coexistence of oppositedipping crustal surfaces bears two fundamental implications for the NTAS geodynamics. First it stresses the importance of the anti-Apennine transfer faults, since they separate crustal blocks of opposite extension polarity. Secondly, it testifies that the extension tectonics not only re-utilized former crustal thrust planes, but also gave origin to new significant Eand NE-dipping detachment planes.Plan and crossview geometries of faults, together with considerations on the role of the metamorphic core complexes, point to an interpretation of the NTAS structure that is more consistent with the 'anastomosing shear' model rather than the 'simple shear' or the 'delamination' ones.Terra Nova, 7, 7-30, 1995.
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