Preservation of stratigraphic settings in continents is mostly confined to uppermost crustal levels, in which prevailing deformation is translational and internal strain of tectonic units is weak. This does not specially depend on association of metamorphism to tectonic processes, but rather on mechanical properties of deforming multilayers. Scattered findings of sedimentary features, not supported by structural investigation on the actual nature of lithologic layering, may lead to failure in determining size of preserved sedimentary sequences. In the intermediate and lower crust, interaction of metamorphism and deformation down to granular scale facilitates construction of new types of lithologic layers and segregation of thick differentiated mineral layerings that mimic stratigraphic sequences. Critical examples of difficulties encou[GG1] [GG2] [GG3] [GG4] ntered in different tectonic contexts when assessing the sedimentary origin and related stratigraphic meaning of variously deformed layered sequences are summarised. In deep subduction-collision zones similar or contrasted lithostratigraphies are of little help in definition of tectonic units; the structural and metamorphic reworking of rocks of contrasted origin constructs tectonic units that repeatedly couple and decouple from similar adjacent sequences and their actual relative mechanical paths may be disclosed by a combined structural and petrologic analytical tool delimiting volumes that experienced equivalent structural histories and metamorphic signatures (contouring of tectono-metamorphic units=TMUs); these units constitute valuable elements of correlation in metamorphic belts and for the investigation of mechanisms of lithosphere dynamics.

Stratigraphy in the continental crust : lithologic and tectonic records / G.G.M. Gosso, M.I. Spalla. - In: BOLLETTINO DELLA SOCIETÀ GEOLOGICA ITALIANA. - ISSN 0037-8763. - 128:2(2009), pp. 473-482. [10.3301/IJG.2009.128.2.473]

Stratigraphy in the continental crust : lithologic and tectonic records

G.G.M. Gosso
Primo
;
M.I. Spalla
Ultimo
2009

Abstract

Preservation of stratigraphic settings in continents is mostly confined to uppermost crustal levels, in which prevailing deformation is translational and internal strain of tectonic units is weak. This does not specially depend on association of metamorphism to tectonic processes, but rather on mechanical properties of deforming multilayers. Scattered findings of sedimentary features, not supported by structural investigation on the actual nature of lithologic layering, may lead to failure in determining size of preserved sedimentary sequences. In the intermediate and lower crust, interaction of metamorphism and deformation down to granular scale facilitates construction of new types of lithologic layers and segregation of thick differentiated mineral layerings that mimic stratigraphic sequences. Critical examples of difficulties encou[GG1] [GG2] [GG3] [GG4] ntered in different tectonic contexts when assessing the sedimentary origin and related stratigraphic meaning of variously deformed layered sequences are summarised. In deep subduction-collision zones similar or contrasted lithostratigraphies are of little help in definition of tectonic units; the structural and metamorphic reworking of rocks of contrasted origin constructs tectonic units that repeatedly couple and decouple from similar adjacent sequences and their actual relative mechanical paths may be disclosed by a combined structural and petrologic analytical tool delimiting volumes that experienced equivalent structural histories and metamorphic signatures (contouring of tectono-metamorphic units=TMUs); these units constitute valuable elements of correlation in metamorphic belts and for the investigation of mechanisms of lithosphere dynamics.
tectonics ; metamorphism ; stratigraphy ; structural correlation
Settore GEO/03 - Geologia Strutturale
2009
Article (author)
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/71407
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 2
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 2
social impact