Abstract

Plate tectonic processes in the Atlantic and western Tethyan realm directed the post-Variscan sedimentary and structural evolution of the High Atlas and Middle Atlas intracontinental mountain ranges of Morocco. Plate movements caused a reactivation of an inherited pan-African or Hercynian fault pattern by the variation of stress regimes through time. This resulted in strike-slip as well as vertical tectonics. During times of relative tectonic quiescence eustatic sea-level changes governed the sedimentary development. The most important, often interacting, global tectonic determinants are: taphrogenesis of the NW-African continental margin lasting until the Early Cretaceous (Triassic rifting and subsequent mid-Atlantic spreading), strike-slip-faulting at the Newfoundland-Gibraltar fault zone (Liassic — earliest Eocene), and continental convergence between Europe (Iberia) and Africa which started in the Late Cretaceous and reached its acme in the Neogene. In the realm of the Central High Atlas and the Middle Atlas the interaction of these processes triggered continental rifting (Triassic) and subsequent marine flooding of the intergrown riftgrabens prograding from the Tethys realm (Early Jurassic — earliest Middle Jurassic). After its abortion, the former Atlas rift was filled up with marine sediments (Bajocian — Bathonian), followed by continental redbeds and final uplift (late Mid Jurassic — late Early Cretaceous). Eustatic sea-level changes mostly governed the sedimentary evolution from Aptian to latest Mid Eocene. After a first weak uplift of the central High Atlas during the Senonian major uplift of the intracontinental chains commenced at the Mid/ Late Eocene transition. Diastrophism of the Atlas ranges during the Miocene and Pliocene coincided with the main orogenic movements of the Betico-Rifean arc.

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