Abstract
The northwest Anatolian basement consists of two distinctly different metamorphic assemblages which were juxtaposed prior to the deposition of Liassic cover sediments. These include the lower and the upper associations. The lower association is mainly represented by Triassic metavolcanic and associated metasedimentary units, together with a slice of ophiolite. The upper association rests on the lower association with a low-angle thrust fault and is composed of Paleozoic or older schists, gneisses and phyllites. A transgressive succession begins above the basement with Permo-Carboniferous neritic limestones. These platform type carbonates were disrupted by rifting during the early Triassic. At the initial phase of rifting, coarse clastics and associated rift type lavas were formed. The rift then evolved into an ocean basin, which closed at the end of the Triassic. The continental margin of the Triassic basin underwent regional metamorphism, initially high T/low P, it was followed later by a high P/low T metamorphic phase. During the metamorphism, the continental margin units were multiply deformed by north-directed compressive stress. Later on, unmetamorphosed Triassic successions of the continental margin were thrust northward onto the metamorphosed part of the same continental margin. Thus the Triassic assemblages of northwest Anatolia collectively display the dynamics and various structural affects of the deformation recorded in the continental margin and adjacent oceanic unit.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 193-207 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Journal | Tectonophysics |
Volume | 243 |
Issue number | 1-2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 15 Mar 1995 |