Abstract

Abstract Diachronous subsidence patterns of Tethyan margins since the Early Palaeozoic provide constraints for paleocontinental reconstructions and the opening of disappeared oceans. Palaeotethys opening can be placed from Ordovician to Silurian times and corresponds to the detachment of a ribbon-like Hun Superterrane along the Gondwanan margin. Neotethys opening took place from Late Carboniferous to late Early Permian from Australia to the eastern Mediterranean area. This opening corresponds to the drifting of the Cimmerian superterrane and the final closing of Palaeotethys in Middle Triassic times. Northward subduction of Palaeotethys triggered the opening of back-arc oceans along the Eurasian margin from Austria to the Pamirs. The fate of these Permo-Triassic marginal basins is quite different from areas to area. Some closed during the Eocimmerian collisional event (Karakaya, Agh-Darband), others (Meliata) stayed open and their delayed subduction induced the opening of younger back-arc oceans (Vardar, Black Sea). The subduction of the Neotethys mid-ocean ridge was certainly responsible for a major change in the Jurassic plate tectonics. The Central Atlantic ocean opened in Early Jurassic time and extended eastwards into the Alpine Tethys in an attempt to link up with the Eurasian back-arc oceans. When these marginal basins started to close the Atlantic system had to find another way, and started to open southwards and northwards, slowly replacing the Tethyan ocean by mountain belts.

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