alpshop2022-22
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-alpshop2022-22
15th Emile Argand Conference on Alpine Geological Studies
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

The inversion of a passive continental margin portrayed by a 2D balanced kinematic forward model across the Velebit Mt.  in the northern external Dinarides fold and thrust belt

Philipp Balling1, Bruno Tomljenović2, and Kamil Ustaszewski1
Philipp Balling et al.
  • 1Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Jena, Germany
  • 2University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia

The Dinarides fold and thrust belt resulted from the collision of the Adriatic Microplate with Eurasia and shows an overall SW-vergent and in-sequence structural architecture. In the Paleocene the ophiolite-bearing internal Dinarides were exclusively affected by crustal shortening. The outward SW propagation of the deformation front reached the eastern Adriatic passive continental margin mainly composed of Mesozoic carbonate platform rocks in Mid-Eocene times. This led to high crustal Mid Eocene to Oligocene shortening and the formation of the external Dinarides. Two balanced cross-sections across the external Dinarides show an along-strike contrasting deformation styles observed in two orogenic segments separated by  the 250 km long dextrally transpressive Split-Karlovac Fault:  the southern segment dominated by SW-vergent forethrusts, and the northern segment dominated by NE-vergent backthrusts, located to the SE and NW from the Split-Karlovac Fault, respectively. So far, it is not known why the regionally rather uniform Mesozoic Adriatic carbonate platform sequence had undergone such contrasting along-strike deformation.

To improve the understanding of the initiation of the NE-vergent backthrusts and to assess the amount of crustal shortening in the NW segment, a 2D kinematic forward model across the central Velebit Mt. was set up. The Velebit Mt. extends for about 130 km along the eastern Adriatic coast and form a SW-dipping monocline with topographic elevations reaching close to 1800 m. This fault-related monocline is formed in the hanging wall of a NE-vergent backthrust system. The 2D kinematic forward model approach applied to a pre-deformed lithostratigraphic template scaled to reported stratigraphic thicknesses enabled us to test various geometries and temporal successions of fault activity not only for the Mid Eocene – Oligocene contraction, but also for the Mesozoic passive margin extension. Through an iterative trial-and-error method, we were able to reproduce the present-day deformed reference section across the Velebit Mt. and the Lika Plateau in its northeastern hinterland.

Our best-fit balanced kinematic model suggests that the reactivation of Middle Triassic and Upper Jurassic basement-rooted half grabens played a key role in the initiation of the backthrusts. These half grabens were mainly reactivated by hanging wall shortcuts. This inversion of normal faults led to predetermination of the thin-skinned NE-vergent back thrusts, forming the upper part of a complex 68 km wide triangle structure. The structurally lower part comprised of a SW-vergent antiformal stack involving Paleozoic basement. We assessed a crustal shortening for the triangle structure of 47 km and a shortening of 98 km for the entire cross-section. Our results show that the differences in both the lithostratigraphic and Mesozoic half grabens along the eastern Adriatic passive margin played a crucial role in the Mid Eocene – Oligocene deformation of the external part of the Dinarides fold and thrust belt, which led to the contrasting along strike deformation styles to the NW and SE of the Split-Karlovac Fault.

How to cite: Balling, P., Tomljenović, B., and Ustaszewski, K.: The inversion of a passive continental margin portrayed by a 2D balanced kinematic forward model across the Velebit Mt.  in the northern external Dinarides fold and thrust belt, 15th Emile Argand Conference on Alpine Geological Studies, Ljubljana, Slovenia, 12–14 Sep 2022, alpshop2022-22, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-alpshop2022-22, 2022.