Abstract

Geomorphological analyses of a wide coastal belt between northern Calabria and Puglia, where a well-exposed staircase of marine terraces extensively crops out, were performed in order to unravel the uplift history of this key-area. As a matter of fact, the Ionian coast of southern Italy represents a strategic sector for investigating the middle-late Quaternary morphotectonic evolution of the orogenic system of southern Italy.The main goal of our research was the reconstruction of a detailed uplift history using spatial distribution of marine terraces and river profile inversion. This was achieved by producing a new, detailed and complete map of the entire sequence of marine terraces and associated palaeoshorelines along the entire coastal sector. A critical review of the literature related to geochronological data from the study area, integrated with a modeling of the interaction between eustatic changes and tectonic uplift allowed demonstrating that the different terraces are correlated to many highstand peaks, dating the highest/oldest terrace to mid-Pleistocene times. Additional constraints on the spatio-temporal variation of tectonic uplift (or base-level fall) have been derived from the inversion of longitudinal river profiles. Such an approach adopts an independent geomorphic marker than the marine terraces and allowed us to obtain an additional estimation the uplift history of the area. The uplift values from the two methods differ in some cases by an order of magnitude, which could be attributed to the rigorous assumption of the river profile inversion or a limitation related to the chronological scheme of marine terraces.Our results highlight a spatial and temporal variation in the uplift rates, which can be only explained with a morphotectonic framework and likely the whole chain-foredeep-foreland system, remained under a prevailingly compressional tectonic regime during the Quaternary, with significant consequences for the seismic hazard of the region.

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