2010
DOI: 10.1130/b30276.1
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Contrasting styles of fault reactivation in curved orogenic belts: Examples from the Central Apennines (Italy)

Abstract: The geometry of the Apennine fold-andthrust belt has been strongly infl uenced by the original architecture of the Adria paleo margin. In the Central Apennines, pre-thrusting normal faults (pre-orogenic Permian(?)/TriassicJurassic and synorogenic Neogene) were reactivated with compressional kinematics during the Neogene-Quaternary orogenesis.We present a study on the control of preexist ing extensional faults on thrust tectonics in the Central Apennines. We describe positive inversion geometries of some salien… Show more

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Cited by 86 publications
(64 citation statements)
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“…1). In the early Mesozoic the region was part of the African passive margin of the Tethys Ocean; it hosted large carbonate platforms and intervening pelagic basins that were subsequently broken up by E-W Triassic-Lower Jurassic extension (Calamita et al, 2011;Di Domenica et al, 2014). Since the Cretaceous, the region evolved within the framework of the convergent motion between the African and European plates; east-to northeastverging thrusts along with their associated foredeep/thrusttop basins progressed toward the Adriatic foreland up to the Middle Pleistocene (Patacca and Scandone, 1989) and were subsequently dissected by strike-slip and normal faulting.…”
Section: Tectonic Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1). In the early Mesozoic the region was part of the African passive margin of the Tethys Ocean; it hosted large carbonate platforms and intervening pelagic basins that were subsequently broken up by E-W Triassic-Lower Jurassic extension (Calamita et al, 2011;Di Domenica et al, 2014). Since the Cretaceous, the region evolved within the framework of the convergent motion between the African and European plates; east-to northeastverging thrusts along with their associated foredeep/thrusttop basins progressed toward the Adriatic foreland up to the Middle Pleistocene (Patacca and Scandone, 1989) and were subsequently dissected by strike-slip and normal faulting.…”
Section: Tectonic Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general this compression consisted of Pliocene inversion of pre-existing Triassic normal faults at the base of the carbonate succession, similar to Pliocene-Quaternary inversion structures in the Apennines (Calamita et al, 2011). Along the boundary between Croatia and Italy, a large anticlinorium displays evidence for several shortening phases from the Miocene to the Pliocene (Figs.…”
Section: Southern Areamentioning
confidence: 95%
“…The Apennines are a Neogene-Quaternary foreland-verging fold-and-thrust belt, showing a complex structural arrangement derived from the interaction between contractional structures and pre-existing extensional faults (e.g., Coward et al, 1999;Scisciani et al, 2002;Tozer et al, 2002;Butler et al, 2006;Calamita et al, 2011;Scisciani, 2009;Di Domenica et al, 2014a, b;Pace et al, 2014;Cardello and Doglioni, 2015). The orogenesis involved Triassic-toMiocene sedimentary successions related to different basin and platform paleogeographic domains of the Adria Mesozoic paleomargin (e.g., Ciarapica and Passeri, 2002;Patacca and Scandone, 2007).…”
Section: Geological and Structural Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%