Late Cenozoic evolution of the Dent Blanche Tectonic Nappe in the Western Alps imaged by low-t thermochronology.
- 1Dipartimento di Scienze Biologiche, Geologiche e Ambientali (BiGeA), Università di Bologna (Alma Mater Studiorum), Bologna, Italy (lorenzo.gemignani@unibo.it)
- 2Basalt company
- 3Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy
- 4Institute of Geosciences, Universität Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany
- 5Vrjie Universiteit Amsterdam (VUA), Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
- 6Fachbereich Geowissenschaften, Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany
The Cenozoic uplift evolution of the Western Alps has been examined from various perspectives. Several studies have suggested that a Late Miocene-Pliocene European slab break-off, coupled with increased erosion due to enhanced glaciation, serves as a driving factor controlling the Western Alps topography. Alternatively, strain partitioning resulting from Adriatic indentation and Oligocene clockwise rotation leads to contrasting kinematic regimes, segmenting the Western Alps into blocks with differential exhumation. Here, we analyze the evolution of the Dent Blanche Tectonic System (DBTS), an Austroalpine nappe in the Western Alps surrounded by oceanic units from the former Liguro-Piemontese ocean.
We apply Low-T thermochronology (apatite and zircon (U-Th)/He) and high resolution mica 40Ar/39Ar dating from the DBTS. ZHe sample ages from the DBTS are ~30 Ma, with an extremely low eU sample from the lower elevation of the Valpelline Valley as young as ~7 Ma. AHe samples are younger, ranging from ~20 Ma to ~3 Ma. Reliable mica Ar ages range from the Paleocene to Oligocene. Most of the samples' age distributions have low radiogenic Ar yields (low 40Ar*), and part of the analyzed muscovite shows low K/Ca ratios, likely indicating chloritization.
Inverse modelling of the cooling ages from selected samples from the core of the DBTS (Arolla Units) shows that the exhumation rate of the DBTS is one-fold lower than the exhumation rates derived in the units north of the nappe. These rates are comparable with slower exhumation rates south of the nappe.
We propose that the DBTS system underwent its highest exhumation rates in the Oligocene to Late Miocene, predating the proposed Pliocene slab break-off as well as Pliocene increased glaciation. The identification of Pliocene-Pleistocene ages from one sample is interpreted to reflect glacial erosion localized in the Valpelline Valley; this is aligned with similar increased denudation rates since Pliocene observed in other Western Alps regions. However, this single cooling age does not provide conclusive evidence that glaciation drove the DBTS’s exhumation from ~3 Ma ago.
How to cite: Gemignani, L., Hülscher, J., Zucali, M., Sobel, E. R., Kuiper, K., and Albino, I.: Late Cenozoic evolution of the Dent Blanche Tectonic Nappe in the Western Alps imaged by low-t thermochronology., EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-17724, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-17724, 2024.