Late Quaternary Tectonics vs Sedimentation history of the offshore Termini in a seismically active segment of the Northern Sicily Continental margin (Southern Tyrrhenian Sea)
- 1Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra e del Mare, Università di Palermo, Italy
- 2Marine Geology & Seafloor Surveying, Department of Geosciences, University of Malta, Msida, Malta
- 3Institut des Sciences de la Terre de Paris (ISTeP), Sorbonne Universités, UPMC Univ Paris 06, France
We investigate the tectonically active Northern Sicily Continental margin focusing on the neotectonics affecting the Offshore of Termini (Southern Tyrrhenian Sea) by using high-resolution seismic and multibeam data. The sedimentary succession along the North Sicilian Continental Margin (NSCM) represents the marine prolongation of those outcropping along the Northern Sicily coastal belt. The NSCM has been originated as a consequence of a complex interaction of compressional events, crustal thinning, and strike-slip faulting. E–W, NW–SE, and NE–SW trending, both extensional and compressional faults, with a local strike-slip component, exerted control on the morphology of the present-day shelf and coastal areas during the Pleistocene. During the Quaternary, the tectonic as well as depositional events have strongly shaped the margin forming the actual complex geomorphic setting of the margin. We present the main results of a high resolution survey that allow to identify several features (e.g. Mass Transport Deposits and pockmarks) linked to gravitational mass movement and fluids escape processes strongly controlled by the tectonics affecting the NSCM. All over the study area, we mapped inside the Late Quaternary depositional sequence repeated and variously distributed MTDs, characterised by transparent/chaotic seismic facies, interbedded to hemipelagic deposits, with seismic facies showing subparallel seismic reflectors of the transgressive and high stand systems tracts. We infer that this MTDs have been seismically induced by earthquakes. We estimate the recurrence times of earthquakes, by using an elaborate age-model that considers a constant sedimentation rate for the last 11.5 My, between 680 and 2200 years.
How to cite: Zizzo, E., Sulli, A., Spatola, D., Gorini, C., and Gasparo Morticelli, M.: Late Quaternary Tectonics vs Sedimentation history of the offshore Termini in a seismically active segment of the Northern Sicily Continental margin (Southern Tyrrhenian Sea), EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-5841, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-5841, 2020.