Geodynamics and Basin-Forming Mechanisms in the Provencal Basin: A Modeling Discussion
Jean Burrus, J. P. Foucher
The Provencal basin is part of the Western European rift system created in
Oligocene time; it has reached the oceanic stage as a result of the eastward
drifting of Corsica and Sardinia. It is a well-documented example of a young
extensional basin. Good-quality seismic refraction
and
reflection
data as well
as heat-flow determinations show that the basin presents many characteristics
commonly observed in an extensional basin: (1) a distinct synrift structure
associated with graben formation, minor block tilting, and very small horizontal
extension (< 10%); the end of the synrift phase is marked by a well-defined
unconformity; (2) significant crustal attenuation visible in both the upper
crust and lower crust; the average vertical thinning (1.9) is by far more
important han the horizontal extension (1.1 to 1.3?); (3) asymmetric structure
of the conjugated Corsican-Sardinian/Provencal margins, associated with
asymmetric heat flow and Bouguer profiles.
As a consequence, the classic "stretching" mechanism or the "simple shear" model does not apply to the observed geometries. The paradox is that the stretching concept adequately accounts for the distribution of the heat flow and for the subsidence (after correction for recent compression). Alternative basin-forming mechanisms will be discussed in terms of crustal metamorphism and ductile flow.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91032©1988 Mediterranean Basins Conference and Exhibition, Nice, France, 25-28 September 1988.