Tectonic Evolution of the Western High Atlas of Morocco: Oblique Convergence, Reactivation, and Transpression

The High Atlas of Morocco is a double‐vergent mountain belt developed by Cenozoic shortening and inversion of a Triassic‐Jurassic rift. The structural setting, the morphometric features, and the patterns of exhumation through time and space change remarkably both along and across the strike. Here we...

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Vydáno v:Tectonics (Washington, D.C.) Ročník 39; číslo 3
Hlavní autoři: Lanari, R., Faccenna, C., Fellin, M. G., Essaifi, A., Nahid, A., Medina, F., Youbi, N.
Médium: Journal Article
Jazyk:angličtina
Vydáno: Washington Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.03.2020
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ISSN:0278-7407, 1944-9194
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Shrnutí:The High Atlas of Morocco is a double‐vergent mountain belt developed by Cenozoic shortening and inversion of a Triassic‐Jurassic rift. The structural setting, the morphometric features, and the patterns of exhumation through time and space change remarkably both along and across the strike. Here we combine structural data with revised thermochronological data to unravel the kinematic and evolution of the western High Atlas. Our results show that the structural grain of the western High Atlas is defined by two main groups of faults, namely, thrust and oblique‐slip faults, which mainly strike subparallel from W‐E to NE‐SW. The slip direction of the thrust structures is NNW‐SSE to NW‐SE oriented, and the slip direction of the oblique‐slip faults is WSW‐ENE to NW‐SE oriented. Pieces of thermochronological and geological evidence indicate that in the last ~10 Ma the exhumation rate increased during the activity thrusts and oblique‐slip faults. The coexistence of these two fault systems also suggests partitioning of deformation under a transpressive regime. In the western High Atlas, we estimate a displacement of ~12 km on the frontal thrusts and of at least ~22 km on the axial oblique‐slip structures. Thrusts and oblique‐slip structures together result in a total cumulative displacement of ~25 km, which represents about half of the Africa‐Eurasia convergence. Key Points The western High Atlas builds up under a transpressional regime due to oblique convergence Using thermochronology and fault kinematics, we infer an overall NW‐SE oriented shortening of ~25 km The onset of the main deformation event occurred in the middle‐late Miocene
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ISSN:0278-7407
1944-9194
DOI:10.1029/2019TC005563