Onset of subduction as the cause of rapid Pliocene-Quaternary subsidence in the South Caspian basin
Backstripping a representative stratigraphic column from the northwest of the South Caspian basin shows that similar to2.4 km of tectonic subsidence has occurred since ca. 5.5 Ma, at similar to1.5-10 times the rate recorded in typical foreland basins. Roughly half the basin’s sedimentary thickness of similar to20 km has accumulated in this time, while the upper part,of the succession has begun to deform by buckle folding. The South Caspian basement appears to be either thick oceanic crust, or thinned, high-velocity continental crust. Seismicity and gravity data indicate that the basement is in the initial stages of subduction under the middle Caspian region to the north. We propose that basement subduction began ca. 5.5 Ma to create the major Pliocene-Quaternary subsidence. Subduction may have been triggered by a regional reorganization in the Arabia-Eurasia collision at that time, possibly following the construction of the Turkish-Iranian Plateau.
Publication Details
Type
Journal ArticleTitle
Onset of subduction as the cause of rapid Pliocene-Quaternary subsidence in the South Caspian basinYear
2002Author(s)
Allen, M.B., Jones, S., Ismail-Zadeh, A., Simmons, M. and Anderson, L.Journal
GeologyVolume
30Issue
9Page(s)
775-778URL