--> ABSTRACT: The Southernmost Margin of the Tethys Realm from Morocco to Oman: Initial Geometry and Timing of the Inversion Processes, by Frizon de Lamotte, Dominique; Raulin, Camille; Mouchot, Nicolas; Wrobel-Daveau, Jean-Christophe; Blanpied, Christian; Ringenbach, Jean-Claude (1) University Cergy-Pontoise, Dept. Geoscience & Environnement, Cergy-Pontoise, France. (2) TOTAL, Projects Nouveaux, TBF, Paris, France. (3) TOTAL, Dept. interprétation sédimentaire et structurale, Paris, France. </p> <p>Along the northern border of Africa, Pangea break-up has been diachronic. During the Jurassic, the Alpine Tethys propagated north-eastward from the Atlantic to the Alps. During the Permian, the Neo-Tethys propagated westward from Oman to north-western Arabia. Then a secondary and late branch of Neo-Tethys gave birth to the East Mediterranean basin. Finally the two oceans connected at end of Jurassic times, achieving the development of Africa northern plate boundary. By the Late Cretaceous, convergence between Africa and Eurasia led to the progressive closure of the Tethys realm. The continental collision is not completely achieved and the different segments of the confrontation zone (Maghreb, Central and East Mediterranean, Zagros and Oman) expose different stages of the process. However, we emphasise the existence of synchronous geodynamic events from one end of the system to the other, although they do not have the same meaning. Two of them are particularly important. The Campanian-Santonian event corresponds to:; #90135 (2011)

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The Southernmost Margin of the Tethys Realm from Morocco to Oman: Initial Geometry and Timing of the Inversion Processes

Frizon de Lamotte, Dominique 1; Raulin, Camille 1; Mouchot, Nicolas 1; Wrobel-Daveau, Jean-Christophe 3; Blanpied, Christian 2; Ringenbach, Jean-Claude 3
(1) University Cergy-Pontoise, Dept. Geoscience & Environnement, Cergy-Pontoise, France. (2) TOTAL, Projects Nouveaux, TBF, Paris, France. (3) TOTAL, Dept. interprétation sédimentaire et structurale, Paris, France.

Along the northern border of Africa, Pangea break-up has been diachronic. During the Jurassic, the Alpine Tethys propagated north-eastward from the Atlantic to the Alps. During the Permian, the Neo-Tethys propagated westward from Oman to north-western Arabia. Then a secondary and late branch of Neo-Tethys gave birth to the East Mediterranean basin. Finally the two oceans connected at end of Jurassic times, achieving the development of Africa northern plate boundary. By the Late Cretaceous, convergence between Africa and Eurasia led to the progressive closure of the Tethys realm. The continental collision is not completely achieved and the different segments of the confrontation zone (Maghreb, Central and East Mediterranean, Zagros and Oman) expose different stages of the process. However, we emphasise the existence of synchronous geodynamic events from one end of the system to the other, although they do not have the same meaning. Two of them are particularly important. The Campanian-Santonian event corresponds to: (1)obduction and exhumation of HP-LT metamorphic rocks around the Arabian promontory; (2) inversion along the margins of the East-Mediterranean basins; (3) lithosphere buckling in the Atlas system (Maghreb) and adjacent Sahara platform. The Middle-Late Eocene event corresponds to: (1) the onset of collision at the northern corner of Arabia, (2) the onset of slab retreat in the Mediterranean and (3) inversion along the margin of the East Mediterranean as well as in the Atlas. The C-S event coincides with a change in plate kinematics resulting in an abrupt increase of convergence velocity. The M-L-E event coincides with a period of strong coupling between the Africa and Eurasia plates and an abrupt decrease of convergence velocity. In the middle of the system, the Central Mediterranean seems to escape to the effects of convergence and is the site of quite permanent extensional movements since the Triassic.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90135©2011 AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Milan, Italy, 23-26 October 2011.