alpshop2024-52, updated on 28 Aug 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-alpshop2024-52
16th Emile Argand Conference on Alpine Geological Studies
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Oral | Wednesday, 18 Sep, 11:30–11:45 (CEST)| Lecture room

Early Miocene tectono-sedimentary shift in the eastern North Alpine Foreland Basin and its relation to changes in tectonic style in the Eastern Alps

Eline Le Breton1, Anne Bernhardt1, Robert Neumeister1,2, Claudia Heismann1, Arthur Borzi1, Julian Hülscher1,3, Richard Sanders1, Patrick Grunert4, and Mark Handy1
Eline Le Breton et al.
  • 1Institute for Geological Sciences, Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany (eline.lebreton@fu-berlin.de)
  • 2DEEP.KBB GmbH, Bad Zwischenahn, Germany
  • 3Basalt-Actien-Gesellschaft, Linz am Rhein, Germany
  • 4Institute of Geology and Mineralogy, University of Cologne, Germany

A striking difference along the Alpine Orogen is the style of collisional tectonics during the Oligo-Miocene, with the onset of escape tectonics in the Eastern Alps. The indentation of the Adriatic Plate into the Eastern Alpine Orogen resulted in the formation of conjugate dextral and sinistral strike-slip faults in the vicinity of the Tauern Window. Moreover, major changes occurred in the foreland of the Eastern and Southern Alps in the Early Miocene, with the cessation of the northern Alpine front propagation and the onset of thrusting along the Southern Alpine Front. We present new results from structural, stratigraphic and subsidence analyses of the eastern North Alpine Foreland Basin (NAFB) to study the relationship between these Alpine tectonic events and basin dynamics.

Our results show a first phase of onset of foreland sedimentation in the eastern NAFB between c. 33-28 Ma, followed by a strong tectonic-driven subsidence between c. 28-25 Ma ending by a phase of erosion and the formation of a basin-wide Northern Slope Unconformity (NSU). During this time period, the rift-related Mesozoic normal faults of the European platform were reactivated and are capped by the NSU. We interpret this phase as an increase in the flexure of the subducting European Plate under the growing Alpine Orogen. Between 25-19 Ma, the eastern NAFB remained in a deep-marine, underfilled state with a gently increase in subsidence. A major shift took place around 19-17 Ma with strong tectonic-driven uplift, ranging from 200 m (absolute minimum) to 1200 m depending on uncertainties on paleo-water depths, and rapid sedimentary infill of the basin. We discuss the possible causes for this major tectono-sedimentary shift in the eastern NAFB in relation to contemporaneous changes in collisional tectonics within the Eastern and Southern Alps, and with a potential Early Miocene slab break-off event beneath the Eastern Alps.

How to cite: Le Breton, E., Bernhardt, A., Neumeister, R., Heismann, C., Borzi, A., Hülscher, J., Sanders, R., Grunert, P., and Handy, M.: Early Miocene tectono-sedimentary shift in the eastern North Alpine Foreland Basin and its relation to changes in tectonic style in the Eastern Alps, 16th Emile Argand Conference on Alpine Geological Studies, Siena, Italy, 16–18 Sep 2024, alpshop2024-52, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-alpshop2024-52, 2024.