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Journal of the Geological Society; May 2004; v. 161; no. 3; p. 501-511; DOI: 10.1144/0016-764903-080
© 2004 Geological Society of London
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Original Article

Testing models of Late Palaeozoic–Early Mesozoic orogeny in Western Turkey: support for an evolving open-Tethys model

Alastair H. F. Robertson1, Timur Ustaömer2, Elizabeth A. Pickett3, Alan S. Collins4, Theo Andrew1 and John E. Dixon1

1 1School of GeoSciences, Grant Institute of Earth Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JW, UK
2 2Department of Geology, Istanbul University, Jeoloji Mühendisligi Bölümü, Avilar, TR-34850, Turkey
3 3British Geological Survey, Murchison House, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3LA, UK
4 4Tectonics Special Research Centre, School of Earth and Geographical Sciences, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia

Field evidence from north–south transects tests three tectonic models for Tethys in Western Turkey for when a Late Palaeozoic ocean was closing and an Early Mesozoic ocean opening. In Model 1, a Palaeozoic ocean subducted southwards, rifting continental fragments from Gondwana and opening a Triassic Neo-Tethys to the south. Closure and collision occurred by latest Triassic time. In Model 2, a wide Palaeozoic Tethys subducted northwards with an active Eurasian margin and a passive Gondwana margin. The northern Gondwana margin rifted in the Triassic; fragments either remained nearby (Taurides) or drifted northwards (e.g. Karakaya) attached to a north-subducting plate. New oceanic crust replaced Palaeo-Tethys with Neotethys and back-arc marginal basins opened along the south Eurasian margin (e.g. Küre). In Model 3, a Palaeozoic ocean also subducted northwards opening wide marginal basins. A wide Southern Neotethys opened along the Gondwana margin. Rifted Eurasian (Anatolides) and Gondwana (Taurides) fragments collided in mid-Tethys by latest Triassic time. Field evidence from the Pontides supports north-dipping subduction models (Model 2 or 3 above). Key features are a south-vergent, HP–LT accretionary prism, magmatic arc and back-arc basin system bordering the Eurasian margin. Also, evidence from the Tauride Mountains favours Model 2 over Model 3. Critically, the Anatolides and Taurides appear to have a common history and were unlikely to have been located on opposite sides of Tethys, as in Model 3.

KEYWORDS: Western Turkey, Tethys, Triassic, subduction




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