2014
DOI: 10.1002/2013tc003364
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Paleomagnetic evidence for a post‐Eocene 90° CCW rotation of internal Apennine units: A linkage with Corsica‐Sardinia rotation?

Abstract: We report on an extensive paleomagnetic study (36 sites) of the Tuscan Nappe succession from the Northern Apennines Arc, aimed to reconstruct the tectonic evolution of the internal sector of this chain. We analyzed Eocene pelagic foreland ramp deposits (Scaglia Toscana Formation) and Oligocene-lower Miocene siliciclastic turbidites (Macigno and Falterona Formations). Paleomagnetic results show that the internal sector of the Northern Apennines underwent large counterclockwise (CCW) rotations with respect to th… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Geodynamic and paleogeographic reconstructions describe the NNE‐wards migration of the northernmost sector of Apennines belt progressively turning perpendicular to the Mesozoic inherited lineaments (Figure c). The change in vergence was due to the anticlockwise rotation of the collisional system during the drifting of the Corsica–Sardinia block, with rotation pole located in the Ligurian Sea (Caricchi et al, ; Gattacceca et al, ). The emplacement of the Emilia and Ferrara arcs (during Messinian and Pleistocene, respectively) in the middle part of the PPAF, completely separated the foredeep into distinct depocentres (Figure c, d).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Geodynamic and paleogeographic reconstructions describe the NNE‐wards migration of the northernmost sector of Apennines belt progressively turning perpendicular to the Mesozoic inherited lineaments (Figure c). The change in vergence was due to the anticlockwise rotation of the collisional system during the drifting of the Corsica–Sardinia block, with rotation pole located in the Ligurian Sea (Caricchi et al, ; Gattacceca et al, ). The emplacement of the Emilia and Ferrara arcs (during Messinian and Pleistocene, respectively) in the middle part of the PPAF, completely separated the foredeep into distinct depocentres (Figure c, d).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The subducted slab rolled back, eastward, and the Apennine orogeny also moved eastward (anticlockwise) (Civetta et al, 1978;Channell, 1996;Faccenna et al, 2001Faccenna et al, , 2004Savelli, 2002;Caricchi et al, 2014). At the beginning of the Eocene the area between Corsica and Tuscany underwent post-orogenic extension, with initial opening of the Tyrrhenian basin and uprising of the asthenospheric mantle (e.g., Doglioni, 1991;Jolivet et al, 1996;Malinverno and Ryan, 1986) and subsequently of associated geotherms.…”
Section: Corsica Magmatic Eventmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Subsequently, during Oligocene‐lower Miocene time the Tuscan units were incorporated in the orogenic wedge, which progressively involved the more external sector of the chain. During this process, the magnetic lineation passively rotated counterclockwise to follow the formation of the Northern Apennine arc [ Caricchi et al ., ]. The parallelism with the main tectonic structures of the chain was therefore maintained.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…The hysteresis loops obtained after correction for the paramagnetic slope are consequently poorly defined and indicate the presence of very low amounts of low‐coercivity ferrimagnetic minerals. The obtained B cr values (in the range 30–45 mT) (Figures b and c) and the available rock magnetic data [see also Caricchi et al ., ] indicate that the very weak remanent signal in these deposits is carried by magnetite. The hysteresis data of the postorogenic deposits indicate a distinct ferromagnetic (in a broad sense) contribution with the presence of low‐coercivity minerals in the pseudosingle to multidomain range grain sizes (Figures d and e).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%