EGU2020-14942
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-14942
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

The pre-Mesozoic basement underneath the Jura Mountains fold-and-thrust belt: an overview from models and maps

Marc Schori, Anna Sommaruga, and Jon Mosar
Marc Schori et al.
  • Fribourg, Earth Sciences, Geosciences, Fribourg, Switzerland (marc.schori@unifr.ch)

The Jura Mountains are a thin-skinned fold-and-thrust belt (FTB) in the northern foreland of the European Alps, extending over northern and western Switzerland and eastern France. The Jura FTB was detached in Triassic evaporites during Late Miocene and Pliocene compression. Prior to this, the pre-Mesozoic basement was intensely pre-structured by inherited faults that had been reactivated under changing stress fields during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic structural evolution of continental Europe. In order to understand the connection between thin-skinned FTB formation and pre-existing basement structures, we compiled boreholes and geological cross-sections across the Northern Alpine Foreland and derived elevation, thickness and erosion models of defined Mesozoic units and the top of the pre-Mesozoic basement.

Our models confirm the presence of basement faults concealed underneath the detached cover of the Jura Mountains. The pre-Mesozoic basement shows differences in structural altitudes resulting from partially overlapping lithospheric processes. They include graben formation during evolution of the European Cenozoic Rift System (ECRIS), flexural subsidence during Alpine forebulge development and lithospheric long-wavelength buckle folding. Faults in connection with these processes follow structural trends that suggest the reactivation of inherited Variscan and post-Variscan fault systems. We discuss the spatio-temporal imprint of lithospheric signatures on the pre-Mesozoic basement and their consequence on the formation of the Jura Mountains FTB. Untangling structures within the pre-Mesozoic basement leads us to a modern understanding of the long-term evolution of the detached Mesozoic cover. Furthermore, it allows us to improve the prediction of ages that are potentially preserved within the Mesozoic cover of the Jura FTB.

How to cite: Schori, M., Sommaruga, A., and Mosar, J.: The pre-Mesozoic basement underneath the Jura Mountains fold-and-thrust belt: an overview from models and maps, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-14942, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-14942, 2020.

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