Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/14806
Authors: Tavarnelli, Enrico* 
Mazzarini, Francesco* 
Scialoja, Eric* 
Isola, Ilaria* 
Title: Deformation history of a foredeep basin during the incorporation of its deposits within an advancing orogenic wedge: The case of the Oligocene-Early Miocene Macigno Costiero Formation, southern Tuscany, northern Apennines, Italy
Journal: Journal of Structural Geology 
Series/Report no.: /147 (2021)
Publisher: Elsevier
Issue Date: Jun-2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsg.2021.104347
Keywords: Foredeep deposits
Orogenic wedge
Oligocene-Miocene
Northern Apennines
Abstract: The Upper Oligocene Macigno Formation cropping out in the coastal section of SW Tuscany represents the sedimentary fill of a foredeep basin developed during the collisional stages that led to the construction of the Apennine mountain belt of peninsular Italy. The stratigraphic sequence consists of alternating sandstones and siltstones, that are affected by km-scale contractional structures, namely SW-dipping thrusts and related NEverging folds. An original field survey carried out along a superb coastal exposure, integrated with analysis of mesoscopic fabrics and their overprinting relationships, makes it possible to unravel a complex deformation history. Four main deformation stages are recognized: i) layer-parallel shortening A; ii) top-to-the-foreland shear B; iii) folding C, comprising the fold nucleation sub-stage C1 and the fold amplification sub-stage C2; and iv) thrust propagation D. The sequence of recognized stages indicates a progressive deformation history of the Macigno Formation as it was incorporated within the evolving Apennine orogenic system. The kinematic history inferred from deformation fabrics and their overprinting relationships within Macigno Fm. deposits in SW Tuscany shows remarkable analogies with the structural evolution of foredeep sediments from other fold-andthrust belts, yet with little deviations mainly consisting of pureshear vs. simple shear fluctuations in the early history of accretion. These provide original information on the modes of accretion of foredeep deposits within evolving collisional belts, thus contributing to an enhanced understanding of orogenic dynamics during mountain building with a classical example whose evolution is unravelled in deta
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