Abstract

Abstract The Kura foreland fold–thrust belt is located in the northern part of the active collisional Lesser Caucasus orogenic belt associated with Arabia–Eurasia convergence. This belt is the best example of mountain-building processes in late Alpine time. Seismic reflection profiles show that the Kura foreland fold–thrust belt of the eastern Caucasus is an active thin-skinned fold–thrust belt and is represented by fault-bend folds, fault-propagation folds and duplexes. Analysis of growth strata in seismic profiles and oil well data from the Kura foreland fold–thrust belt documents that the evolution of deformation has been continuing during the last c. 14–15 myr (since the Middle Miocene), together with the thrust system kinematics. The geometry of the growth strata is associated with footwall synclines and piggy-back basins. Compressional deformation on the Kura foreland began in the Middle Miocene (Chokrakian) and reached its maximum rate at the end of the Miocene ( c. 5 Ma).

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