4.7 Article

A recent tectonic reorganization in the south-central Mediterranean

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 226, Issue 3-4, Pages 335-345

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2004.07.038

Keywords

Mediterranean; subduction; plate boundaries; Italy; seismicity; geodesy

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New geodetic data combined with seismicity, geologic and geochemical information document a major tectonic reorganization in the central Mediterranean around 0.8-0.5 Ma, when rapid trench migration and consequent Tyrrhenian back-are extension which dominated the region's evolution since the Tortonian (10-8 Ma) essentially stopped. In response, the African convergence in Sicily was transferred to a back-thrust in the Southern Tyrrhenian, characterized by frequent M5-6 earthquakes in the last 20 years. A diffuse transform boundary formed across northeastern Sicily to connect the Sicilian and Calabrian plate boundaries, causing opening of the Messina Straits-home to large historical earthquakes-and unusual volcanism in the Aeolian Island arc and the intraplate Mount Etna. A divergence of the Ionian region from the main part of Africa, with northeast-ward motions that reflect the joint influence of African push and Hellenic slab pull, and are transmitted to Calabria and Adria, could explain motions observed in the Sicily Channel, Calabria and Apulia, as well as the high level of southeastern Sicilian seismic activity. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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