4.6 Article

Origin and consequences of western Mediterranean subduction, rollback, and slab segmentation

Journal

TECTONICS
Volume 33, Issue 4, Pages 393-419

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2013TC003349

Keywords

subduction; rollback; plate reconstruction

Funding

  1. ERC [306810]
  2. NWO VIDI grant
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [306810] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The western Mediterranean recorded subduction rollback, slab segmentation and separation. Here we address the questions of what caused Oligocene rollback initiation, and how its subsequent evolution split up an originally coherent fore arc into circum-southwest Mediterranean segments. We kinematically reconstruct western Mediterranean geology from subduction initiation to present, using Atlantic plate reconstructions as boundary condition. We test possible reconstructions against remnants of subducted lithosphere imaged by seismic tomography. Transform motion between Africa and Iberia (including the Baleares) between similar to 120 and 85Ma was followed by up to 150km convergence until 30Ma. Subduction likely initiated along the transform fault that accommodated pre-85Ma translation. By the similar to 30Ma inception of rollback, up to 150km of convergence had formed a small slab below the Baleares. Iberia was disconnected from Sardinia/Calabria through the North Balearic Transform Zone (NBTZ). Subduction below Sardinia/Calabria was slightly faster than below the Baleares, the difference being accommodated in the Pyrenees. A moving triple junction at the trench-NBTZ intersection formed a subduction transform edge propagator fault between the Baleares and Calabria slab segments. Calabria rolled back eastward, whereas the Baleares slab underwent radial (SW-S-SE) rollback. After Kabylides-Africa collision, the western slab segment retreated toward Gibraltar, here reconstructed as the maximum rollback end-member model, and a Kabylides slab detached from Africa. Opening of a slab window below the NBTZ allowed asthenospheric rise to the base of the fore arc creating high-temperature metamorphism. Western Mediterranean rollback commenced only after sufficient slab-pull was created from 100 to 150km of slow, forced subduction before similar to 30Ma.

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