Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Late cenozoic subduction complex of Sicily

January 1, 1990

Besides remnants of Hercynian deformations in the Peloritani nappe and of pre-Oligocene Alpine structures in the Troiani nappe, most compressive structures observed in the Sicilian accretionary wedge result from the late Cenozoic (Tortonian to Present) continental subduction of the Apulia (Iblei) block, and are thus synchronous with distensive structures related to the opening of the Tyrrhenian Sea. Syntectonic deposits fill southward-migrating foredeeps in a sequential fashion, and the dating of these deposits helps to constrain the timing of deformation. Similarly, Plio-Quaternary sediments, eroded from the accreted units, rest on top of the allochthon in either compressive piggy-back depressions or extensional basins. The age and configuration of these overlap deposits constrain our reconstructions of the subsurface geometry of the underlying peri-Tyrrhenian detachment faults or S-verging thrust-faults. Post-depositional erosion, normal faulting and syntectonic filling of basins contribute to maintaining the critical taper of the prism, whose geometry is continuously altered owing to frontal accretion, underplating and isostatic uplift.


Publication Year 1990
Title Late cenozoic subduction complex of Sicily
DOI 10.1016/0191-8141(90)90009-N
Authors F. Roure, D. G. Howell, C. Muller, I. Moretti
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Journal of Structural Geology
Index ID 70016093
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
Was this page helpful?