Abstract

The easternmost part of the Mediterranean corresponds to a tectonically complex region which is linked with the convergence between Africa and Eurasia. The tectonostratigraphic evolution of this region is poorly constrained because of the absence of exploration wells. Cyprus is a crucial area to assess the link between the tectonic deformation and the consequent sedimentation in the Northern Levant margin. Paleogene and Neogene basins in the southern part of Cyprus record the main tectonic events related to the convergence of Africa and Eurasia. The objective of this contribution is to investigate the timing and the mechanisms of basin deformation, as well as the sedimentary infill of basins located onshore Cyprus and finally resolve how their evolution is linked to the regional geodynamic events. Based on fieldwork studies we reconstructed the tectono-stratigraphic evolution of the Polis Basin and the Limassol Basin to propose a conceptual model for the evolution of the Northern Levant margin, in accordance with the main geodynamic events. It is expected that analysis of the Polis and Limassol depressions, and later comparison of them will also shed more lights on the impact of the substratum and how it is associated to the main tectonic events.

Highlights

  • Cyprus is located in the eastern corner of the Mediterranean Sea

  • The results pertaining to the sedimentary filling and the structural evolution of two Neogene basins (Polis and Limassol) as follows: d The Polis Basin is interpreted as a piggyback basin that is controlled by thin-skinned tectonics

  • This kinematic evolution of the thrust belt is localized by the weak sediments of the Mamonia Complex below the detached Cenozoic successions

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Summary

Introduction

Cyprus is located in the eastern corner of the Mediterranean Sea. Cyprus is located in the eastern corner of the Mediterranean Sea It is 225 km long (E-W) and 95 km wide (N-S) and is bounded by the Cyprus Arc and Eratosthenes Seamount to the south and Turkey to the north (Fig. 1). Eratosthenes Seamount is the bathymetric expression of an isolated carbonate platform which appears to subduct beneath the Cyprus Arc (Papadimitriou et al, 2018; Robertson et al, 2012). After the obduction of the Ophiolites, a series of smaller basins were formed (Kinnaird, 2008). These basins are: (a) Mesaoria Basin; (b) Psematismenos Basin (PSB), (c) Limassol Basin (LB), and (d) Polis Basin (PB) (Fig. 2A)

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