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http://hdl.handle.net/1842/5037
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Nairn word.zip | Original files not available for download | 190.52 MB | Microsoft Word | | | Nairn2011.pdf | PhD thesis | 46.14 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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| Title: | Testing alternative models of continental collision in Central Turkey by a study of the sedimentology, provenance and tectonic setting of Late Cretaceous–Early Cenozoic syn-tectonic sedimentary basins. |
| Authors: | Nairn, Steven Peter |
| Supervisor(s): | Robertson, Alastair Dixon, John |
| Issue Date: | 28-Jun-2011 |
| Publisher: | The University of Edinburgh |
| Abstract: | In central Anatolia, Turkey, a strand of the former northern Neotethys Ocean subducted
northwards under the Eurasian (Pontide) active margin during Late Cretaceous–Early
Cenozoic time. Subduction and regional plate convergence were associated with the
generation and emplacement of accretionary complexes and supra-subduction zone-type
ophiolites onto former passive margins of microcontinents. The resultant suture zones contain
Late Cretaceous to Middle Eocene basins (“The Central Anatolian Basins”) including: 1) the
Kırıkkale Basin; 2) the Çankırı Basin, 3) the Tuz Gölü Basin and; 4) the Haymana - Polatlı
Basin. Using stratigraphic logging, igneous geochemistry, micropalaeontology and
provenance studies, this study tests two end-member models of basin evolution. In model
one, the basins developed on obducted ophiolitic nappes following closure of a single
northern Neotethys Ocean during the latest Cretaceous. In model two, northern Neotethys
comprised two oceanic strands, the İzmir-Ankara-Erzincan Ocean to the north and the Inner
Tauride Ocean to the south, separated by the Niğde-Kırşehir microcontinent, which was
rifted from the Gondwana continent to the south. In this scenario, the basins developed as
accretionary-type basins, associated with north-dipping subduction which persisted until the
Middle Eocene when continental collision occurred.
Where exposed, the basements of the Central Anatolian Basins comprise the Ankara
Mélange, a mainly Upper Cretaceous subduction-accretion complex and the western/northern
margin of the Niğde-Kırşehir microcontinent. New geochemical data from the composite
basement of the Kırıkkale Basin identify mid ocean-ridge basalt (MORB), here interpreted to
represent relict Upper Cretaceous Neotethyan oceanic crust. During the latest Cretaceous, the
Kırıkkale and Tuz Gölü Basins initiated in deep water above relict MORB crust and
ophiolitic mélange, bordered by the Niğde-Kırşehir microcontinent to the east where
marginal facies accumulated. Further west, the Haymana-Polatlı Basin represents an
accretionary-type basin constructed on the Ankara Mélange. To the north, the Çankırı Basin
developed on accretionary mélange, bounded by the Pontide active margin to the north.
Palaeocene sedimentation was dominated by marginal coralgal reef facies and siliciclastic
turbidites. Latest Palaeocene–middle Eocene facies include shelf-type Nummulitid limestone,
shallow-marine deltaic pebbly sandstones and siliciclastic turbidites.
This thesis proposes a new model in which two north-dipping subduction zones were active
during the late Mesozoic within northern Neotethys. In the south, ophiolites formed above a
subduction zone consuming the Inner Tauride Ocean until the southward retreating trench
collided with the northern margin of the Tauride continent emplacing ophiolites and mélange.
In the north, subduction initiated outboard of the Eurasian margin triggering the genesis of
supra-subduction zone ophiolites; the subduction zone rolled back southwards until it
collided with the Niğde-Kırşehir microcontinent, again emplacing ophiolites during latest
Cretaceous time. Neotethyan MORB still remained to the west of the Niğde-Kırşehir
microcontinent forming the basement of the Kırıkkale and Tuz Gölü Basins. Latest
Palaeocene–middle Eocene regional convergence culminated in crustal thickening, folding,
uplift and strike-slip faulting which represent final continental collision and the geotectonic
assembly of central Anatolia. |
| Keywords: | Turkey Anatolia tectonics Late Cretaceous continental collision |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1842/5037 |
| Appears in Collections: | Earth and Planetary Science Research Institute thesis and dissertation collection
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