Options
Helg, Urs
Nom
Helg, Urs
Affiliation principale
Fonction
Ancien.ne collaborateur.trice
Identifiants
Résultat de la recherche
2 Résultats
Voici les éléments 1 - 2 sur 2
- PublicationAccès libreIllite crystallinity patterns in the Anti-Atlas of Morocco(2008)
;Ruiz, Geoffrey M. H.; ; ; The low-grade metamorphism of the sedimentary cover of the Moroccan Anti-Atlas is investigated using Illite crystallinity (IC) method. More than 200 samples from three key areas (southwestern, central and eastern Anti-Atlas) have been taken from a maximum of different stratigraphic levels and have been analysed. The metamorphism is of low to very low degree throughout the southern flank of the Anti-Atlas. It increases from northeast to southwest. Whereas in the eastern Anti-Atlas diagenetic and anchizonal IC-values are predominant, in the western and central Anti-Atlas also epizonal IC-values are found. In every respective area the IC improves with stratigraphic age. At the scale of the entire Palaeozoic Anti-Atlas basin the IC correlates best with estimated paleo-overburden. However, burial metamorphism cannot be the cause even though considering missing sedimentary pile of Late Carboniferous age. The ‘abnormal’ paleo-geothermal gradient of 43–35 °C/km we evidenced for the Carboniferous is a true one, and has to be related to a basement sequence enriched in heat producing elements such as series of the West African Craton. - PublicationAccès libreFolding and inversion tectonics in the Anti-Atlas of Morocco(2004)
; ; ;Caritg, SéverineRobert-Charrue, CharlesThe late Variscan Anti-Atlas of Morocco shows some conspicuous deviations from the standard anatomy of foreland fold-and-thrust belts. Large basement inliers crop out at a very short distance of less than 50 km behind the southeastern front of the fold belt, reminiscent of Windriver-style basement uplifts. In contrast to the Rocky Mountain foreland, however, the Anti-Atlas basement uplifts punctuate tightly folded Paleozoic cover series similar in tectonic style to the Appalachian Valley and Ridge province. Cover shortening is exclusively accommodated by buckle folding, and the Anti-Atlas fold belt lacks any evidence for duplexing or thrust faults other than the occasional steep reverse fault found near basement inliers. Basement domes have classically been considered as the result of vertical tectonics in a horst and graben fashion, or, alternatively, as large “plis de fond” [ Argand, 1924 ], basement folds. Unfolding of a large portion of an Ordovician quartzite marker bed reveals a minimum shortening of 17% (30 km). Balancing this section at the crustal scale indicates a lower crustal detachment level at 18 to 25 km depth. Basement shortening is inferred to be accommodated through massive inversion of former extensional faults, inherited from a Late Proterozoic-Lower Cambrian rifting phase.