EGU2020-2001, updated on 17 Nov 2022
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-2001
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Rotational Evolution of Western Anatolia since the Miocene and Its Implications on the Subduction Dynamics of Eurasia-Africa Collision

Bora Uzel1, Nuretdin Kaymakci2, Elif Cakir1, Levent Tosun3, Murat Ozkaptan4, Okmen Sumer1, Klaudia Kuiper5, Cor Langereis6, and Ersin Koralay1
Bora Uzel et al.
  • 1Dokuz Eylul University, Department ofGeological Engineering, İzmir, Turkey (bora.uzel@deu.edu.tr)
  • 2Middle East Technical University, Department of Geological Engineering, Ankara, Turkey
  • 3Cardiff University, School of Earth and Ocean Sciences, Cardiff, United Kingdom
  • 4Karadeniz Technical University, Department of Geophysical Engineering, Trabzon, Turkey
  • 5Vrije University, Department of Earth Sciences, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  • 6Utrecht University, Fort Hoofddijk Paleomagnetic Laboratory, Utrecht, The Netherlands

The African-European convergent tectonic setting has resulted in a complex deformation history with several large-scale tectonic features in western Anatolia, where is dominated by a crustal-scale extension since the late Eocene. The Menderes metamorphic core complex, the İzmir-Balıkesir Transfer Zone, and the North Anatolian Fault Zone are some of these main tectonic features. To understand their spatio-temporal relationships we employ paleomagnetic, geochronologic and kinematic studies in the northernmost part of the western Anatolia, where these structures interacting with each other. 

Our results show that western Anatolia has experienced at least two separate rotational phases since the Miocene. The first rotational phase is clockwise and related volcanism is dated as 21–16 Ma. The second rotational phase is counterclockwise and related volcanic rocks are dated as 14–12 Ma. According to collected kinematic data, pervasive transcurrent tectonism was dominated during the first phase, while the second one was dominated by extensional (and/or transtensional) tectonism. Here, the mode of extension switched from distributed diffuse deformation to discrete local deformation, possibly due to tearing and retreating of the northward subducting African oceanic slab below the western  Anatolian crust. This interrelated process also led to the localization of the İzmir-Balıkesir Transfer Zone with the decoupling of strike-slip faults, and to the episodic exhumation of the Menderes metamorphic core complex. This study is supported by a Tübitak Project, Grant Number of 117R011.

How to cite: Uzel, B., Kaymakci, N., Cakir, E., Tosun, L., Ozkaptan, M., Sumer, O., Kuiper, K., Langereis, C., and Koralay, E.: Rotational Evolution of Western Anatolia since the Miocene and Its Implications on the Subduction Dynamics of Eurasia-Africa Collision, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-2001, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-2001, 2020.