Abstract
In this paper, the CROP03-deep seismic reflection profile in the Northern Apennines is described and re-considered in light of new geophysical data and interpretations made available in the last five years (particularly from heat flow measurements, aeromagnetics, tomography, active stress determination and passive seismology). The crustal structure of the Northern Apennines is shown to be composed of two distinct domains. To the west is the Tyrrhenian domain and to the east is the Adriatic domain. These domains have distinctive geological and geophysical characteristics that exhibit distinct reflectivity patterns at all crustal levels. In the Tyrrhenian domain, the Upper Oligocene-Lower Miocene compressive structures are no longer recognizable, because they are dissected by subsequent extensional tectonic features. The seismic profile highlights the strong asymmetry of extensional deformation, and the upper crust is affected by a set of six major, east-dipping, low-angle normal faults. In the Adriatic domain, compressive tectonics have acted since the Middle-Miocene, and the pattern of shallow contractional structures is well preserved. The geological interpretation of the seismic data supports a thick-skinned style of deformation, where the basement is involved in the major thrust sheets. The good quality of seismic data also allows for determining the total shortening produced by the contractional structures. In the central part of the profile, at the border between the Tyrrhenian and Adriatic domains, seismic data shows the presence of an intermediate sector. The sector consists of a highly reflective window, where the refraction data indicate a local doubling of the crust for about 30 km. A scenario is presented that attempts to describe the geodynamics that drove the tectonic evolution of the Northern Apennines since the Upper Oligocene.
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