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Key elements to clarify the 110 million year hiatus in the Mesozoic of eastern Syria
Author(s) -
Cécile Caron,
Mikhail Mouty
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
geoarabia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1025-6059
DOI - 10.2113/geoarabia120215
Subject(s) - geology , cretaceous , aptian , graben , paleontology , horst , mesozoic , horst and graben , rift , trough (economics) , sedimentary rock , basement , structural basin , archaeology , economics , macroeconomics , history
Log correlations, biostratigraphical results and seismic data were combined to show that from Late Triassic Norian to Early Cretaceous Aptian times, the Euphrates area (Eastern Syria) was part of a huge saddle-like northeast-trending ridge (the Hamad Uplift) characterized by a prolonged stratigraphic hiatus. This uplift, developed in the Late Triassic, was multiply reactivated during the Mesozoic, particularly in the Early Cretaceous Aptian-Albian times, during a major reorganization phase of the Neo-Tethyan rift system. This uplift marked the separation between two regions with distinctive tectono-sedimentary evolutions: an eastern isolated and starved region (Euphrates Graben) and a western region that was mainly influenced by the sedimentary dynamics of the westerly Bishri Trough, linked to the Palmyrides Basin. The Hamad Uplift broke-up into a N140°E-oriented graben system in late Albian times. This early NE-trending extensional stage was accompanied by volcanic activity and introduced the main phase of horst-and-graben development within the Euphrates Graben in the Late Cretaceous Senonian times.

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