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Palaeomagnetic study of an allochthonous terraine: the Scisti Silicei Formation, Lagonegro Basin, southern Italy
Author(s) -
Incoronato A.,
Tarling D. H.,
Nardi G.
Publication year - 1985
Publication title -
geophysical journal of the royal astronomical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.302
H-Index - 168
eISSN - 1365-246X
pISSN - 0016-8009
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-246x.1985.tb04334.x
Subject(s) - nappe , clockwise , geology , anticline , paleomagnetism , craton , paleontology , tectonics , structural basin , rotation (mathematics) , seismology , geomorphology , geometry , mathematics
Summary. The Jurassic Scisti Silicei Formation forms part of the Lagonegro superimposed tectonic units I and II that are thought to represent the axial and internal margins of the Mesozoic Lagonegro Basin, prior to nappe formation. Sampling was carried out in the lower (Lagonegro) and upper (Pignola) nappes in two differently oriented anticlines. Single and multi‐component magnetizations are present. Isothermal remanence acquisition rates show that magnetite and haematite are present which, in most Lagonegro specimens, show the same direction of magnetization. Comparison of the palaeomagnetic directions with those from Jurassic rocks on the stable African craton indicates a 147° anticlockwise rotation of the lower nappe which is similar to 139° previously reported for the upper nappe at Vietri di Potenza. The same comparisons show a 44° clockwise rotation of the upper nappe at Pignola. These results suggest that the doubled nappe structures, sampled some 50 km apart, resulted from their emplacement by translation with little rotation prior to the opening of the Tyrrhenian Sea and that it was the opening of this Sea that caused the predominantly anticlockwise rotation. This work therefore indicates the way in which palaeomagnetic analyses can be used, even within complex allochthonous areas, as an aid to deciphering their tectonic evolution.

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