Ratschbacher Et Al-1993-Tectonics
Ratschbacher Et Al-1993-Tectonics
Ratschbacher Et Al-1993-Tectonics
b
earliest Cretaceous early . plate motions
ß
"
'••'"ß• East.Ca•athia/
Rhodopta
.
..'.......' 20
."N35
'".•_
0 :::
.............. \ ': ." :....v,0
'-,'.80. :
:.. .' ,,0,/':'.:• '...'..'].
•'.•s '"" ..... •0 . •"
"•'&.-•.
Apuli
"••...•::'" '"....'...
'•i:"•j'••;7•
:-".... Moesia Ma • 0: ""4130
Aust•'oalpine
•:!!iiiii:?>t.,•7• '•. • Africa
10,c
Apuli
'•'"'"'""'•"'•'"'"'
'"
-'"•2'-"•'-.
"::"
:•-'-.-'.'••
'""
.':'
'""'
ßVarda'"
r
Apu,,a"!•:•:i:i:i:i:i:i:i:•:?:•::i::i::iii?:i::•ii::•::•iii•i•?'
Fig. 2. (a) Palinspasticsketchof the Carpathians duringthe earliestCretaceousbefore onsetof
convergence (modifiedafter Siindulescu [1988]), and Late Cretaceous paleodeclinationsat two points
northand west of the Moesianplatform[from Piltra,scu et al., 1990]. Note increaseof rotationangle
aroundthe Moesianpromontoryacquiredduringthe formationof the Carpathianorocline.(b) Two-
dimensional, successiveapproximation reconstructionof earlyMiocenepaleotectonics of theCarpathian
belt simplifiedafterBalla [1985].(c) Platemotionvectorsfor threepointslocatedon Africa (Tunisia),
Apulia(EasternAlps),andEastCarpathia-Rhodopia (SouthCarpathians) compiledafterDercourtet al.
[1986].
ß
ß
o
o,
c..)
(D ß
• .
,
e-
X X
x x
X • X X
JeA.l.l•.1•1.11
858 Ratschbacher
et al.:SouthCarpathian
Orecline
Formation
S1+S2
orientation of structures
Cretaceous-early Tertiary
displacement
0 n=178
Miocene
dextral shearing
displacement partitioninginto
thrustshear,pure shear flattening,
and wrench shear
Fig.4. Schematic
blockdiagram
(center)
defining
themajor
structures,
orientation
diagrams
(topright;
lower
hemisphere,
equalarea)
ofmajor crystal-plastic
structures,
andstrain
(bottom
row).S1+S2,firstand
second
Alpinefoliation;
LI+L2,firstandsecondAlpinestretching
lineafion
(second
deformationasfull
symbols);
F1,firstAlpine
folding.
Definition
ofes,v ofstrain
diagram
(bottom
righ0seeTable1;circles
andarrowshow strain
gradient
approaching
thethrust
contact
betweenupper
DanubianandSeverin-Getic
nappes.
Modelforstrain
accumulation
during
crystal-plastic
deformation
(bottom
left):
displacement(open
arrows)
is partitioned
intothrust
shear,
pureshearflattening
dueto transpression,
tangential
stretch,
gravitational
spreading,
andwrenchshear,
concentrated
alongtheCema4iufaultsystem.
Finitestrain
is
strongly oblate.
surfaces
ispossible
in moderately deformed
rocks.
Highstrain somewhat steeper thanfirstdeformation
structuresandformed,
shearzonesshowmultiplesetsof shear
planes
withextensional together withmesoscale dextralstrike-slip
faults,attheductile-
character;they correspond
to shearbands.A subhorizontal brittletransition.The overallgeometriceffectof the second
stretching
lineation(L1)liesinS1andtrendsnortheast
(Figures deformation is a stretch
alongL1-L2.
4 and5). It is defined
byorientedminerals,elongated
and/or Localhigh-strain
zones
inthebasement
arecharacterized
by
pulledapartpebblesand minerals, and the longaxesof intense
retrometamorphism
(chloritization,
albitization).
Struc-
asymmetric
strainshadows.
Opencrackswerefilledwithdebris tureswereformedat andunderfallingAlpinemetamorphic
andchlorite,
calcite,
andquartz
fibers.
Folds(F1)arefightto temperatures,finally crossingthe ductile-brittletransition.
isoclinal,recumbent,and their axes (B1) have variable Throughout
crystal-plastic
deformation
(firstands,econdAlpine
orientations.
In highstrainzonesB1 parallels
L1. deformation)
strain
orientation
wasmaintained(e.g.,Figure
5a,
Second
deformation
isportrayed
byoutcrop-
andmap-scale stationRO5in thebasement
of thelowerDanubian
unit,station
folding(F2), a crenulationcleavageandassociated intersection RO19in Liassicblackphyllites
of theupperDanubian
thrust
lineation,anda stretchinglineation.
Bothlineationsandthefold system);we interpretthe distinctstructures
as a resultof a
axes are subparallel to L1. In incompetent rocks(e.g., single progressivedeformation.
carbonafic phyllites
of theSeverin nappe,phyllites
of thelower Strainmeasurements
showthatL1 parallels
X of finite
Danubianunit,station
RO33,Figure5b),F2isfighttoisoclinal strainandthatS1is subparallel
to theXY plane(flattening
andvergestoward SE.Preferably
in Mesozoicsequencessouth plane).Strainis oblate
(Table1, Figures
4 and5), intensity
of thePetro•anibasin,we observed
a second generationof increases,
andstrainratiobecomes progressively
moreoblate
shearbands(SB2instationsRO19,RO27; Figure5).Theydip towardthrustboundaries(e.g.,station
RO20,we sampled
a
Ratschbacher
et al.: SouthCarpathian
OreclineFormation 859
• R09
••7:•777:i:!:•'•7:.';
....................... -'•"'•"-"'=•.'.'.••i•i•i•i•"•'•:..'.:•:•:•=_..
•"••.......:•i•i•i•ii•i•i•i•i•i•i•i•i•i•ii``
/•:•//!?:11111iiiii!"'""••-"
sta-••••.'.•••
'",•"
•• '""',-'•'".':':..::•
"'""':••
i i .....'....... --,.. ......
::•::•i•::•!•?:•;?:•::•?:•i!i•i?':/..:.:•....::•:..%...
_,'-•"'7" - .....),," qgs.b. ".........
'.....................................................
'?i•;•'5:•i•i•:;i•i•::i::.
'........ •:i:i:!:::i'i'i!
...........
•i:i:i tz
•x strain(XYprojection) O stallohs " -'
Jt2•ty and unit spl'•ro
"'l" foliation
trajectory • stretchin0
trajectory .-., displacement
vector
Fig. 5. Orientation,
structural,
strain,andkinematic
dataof deformation
in the(a) Ha•eg- Petroõani
and
(b) Petro•ani- ¾idrabasinareas.Stereonets
(lowerhemisphere,
equalarea):0, pre-Alpine
deformation;
1, 2, Alpinestructures;
L, stretching
lineafion;S, foliation;SB, shearbands;F: fold axes;TG, tension
gashes; beamed,meanorientations.Shearbanddataareplottedas greatcircleswith lineafionas arrows
heading intodirectionof displacement of thehanging wall.Abbreviation forshearsense criteriaonmaps:
ab,asymmetric boudinage; cc,calcitetexture;qtz,quartztexture;cLsigmaclast;sb,shearband;sf, shear
fold; sz, shearzone.Calciteandquartzc- axistextures: all oriented parallelto XZ-principalplane
(containing stretching
lineationandfoliafionnormal,seeFigure$a bottomleft); line andarrowwithin
diagramgiveinterpretation of planeandsense of shearof noncoaxialflowcomponent. Notethat(local)
top-to-SW shearis particularly
pronounced southof thePetro•ani basin(stations
RO20,RO25);analysis
of texturesacrossa well-exposed
100 m profileindicates
homogeneous
flow.
straingradientapproaching
thethrustcontact betweentheupper second Alpinedeformation wasgenerally top-to-NE,butcoaxial
Danubian and Severin-Geticnappes in pebble bearing flow contributedsignificantlyto the overalldeformation.Non-
metaarcose rocks,Figure4 - strainplot - cirlcesand arrow). coaxialstrainis demonstrated by shearbandsoccurringin
The straingeometryimpliesthatthethrustsystemwasstretched singlesets.Coaxialstrainis indicatedby conjugateshearbands,
nearlyradially (Figure4, lower left). but particularlyby orthorhombic quartztextures,and textures
Figure5 showsfoliationandstretching trajectories
anddis- indicatinglocaltop-to-SWshear(Figure5). The latterseemsto
placementvectorsconstructedbasedon evaluationof field and be pronounced alongthe southern rim of the Petro•anibasin
sampledata. Strike of S1 and thrusts,and trendof L1 are, in (stationsRO20, RO25), wherewe sampleda profileacross
general,subparallel.Displacementduringboth the first and Mesozoicrocksto studystrainpathvariations (seequartztex-
860 Ratschbacher
et al.:SouthCarpathian
Orocline
Formation
ß ' R • 1
•,.'-•ii!i
mIoa.t•::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
s/r• ½?:i½i!ii•:. ,z-'--./ Petro$ani-Vidra R030
..::........'•'"'•:i:!:!½•:[:!::':'::!:i:!:i:!:!:•:[:•..,, (RO31Q'I'D
2 I ' ..............
• t½$ • '" '"?..i!:..!i½"•'.':"':"½::'•
.....
-....
•:i•?:ii!i!:ii}:ii:iiiili!i?:•:•:::•½•:'•'"i'!
.....
R020
(RO14QTZ) R020 R020 R025 R027 R030
o •
o o o
Fig. 5. (continued)
tures in Figure 5). During the seconddeformation,S1 lithons Alpinemetamorphic conditionsin theSouthCarpathian nappe
were boudinagedand rotated antitheticallyto the top-to-NE pile, we interprettheseagesasformationages.A thermalpeak
shear. at about100 Ma is alsoindicatedby the youngest amphibole
Very low to low-gradeAlpinemetamorphism is syntectonic agesfrom the basement,and wholerock agesfrom Mesozoic
with the describedstructures.
The youngest rocksinvolvedin metasediments.Consequently,deformationduring the first
thrustingand crystal-plasticdeformationare AptJan(Getic, AlpineeventmusthavestartedduringEarly Cretaceous times;
Danubianand Severinnappes)[Berzaet al., 1988;Iancuet al., thethmstsystemrelaxedthermallyduringongoingdeformation
1990].Rupelianto Pannonian rocksof theHalegandPetro•ani (secondAlpinedeformation; likely Late Cretaceous).
basins[BerzaandDrilgAnescu, 1988] lie unconformablyupon Metamorphictemperatures may be evaluatedby examining
deformedand metamorphosed rocks.Figure6 summarizes the resettingof theK/Ar isotopicsystemin differentminerals.Pre-
available isotopic ages concerningthe Alpine tectono- Alpine muscovitewas not rejuvenatedin the Getic nappe,
metamorphicevent. K/Ar biotite agesfrom rocksof all units whereasbiotite was partially to completelyreset,at least in
clusterbetween90 and 120 Ma. Due to the relativelylow deformedrocks(seerock descriptionof Soroiuet al. [1970],
TABLE 1. Crystal-Plastic
Strainin theCentralSouth-Carpathians
X>Y>7.,principal •, • 43/3[(s7-s•
strainaxialratio;Strainintensity, 2+(•-e;5
2+(•7•;5]
112
, where
ln(l+h) is a prin_cil:•l_
._.ha_rural_
sU'aincorresponding
to 4, its conventional
counterpart;
Strainratio,(Lode's
parameter) v = (•2-•-•)(•,-•)'• andk = (X/Y)(Y/Z)'•.
Ratschbacher
et al.: SouthCarpathian
OreclineFormation 861
! ! ! - . _ ......
wholerock
3 r'•amphibolo
2 3
Rb/Sr ages
Fig. 6. Histograms(age againstnumberof samples)of isotopicdata (<200 Ma) from the centralSouth
Carpathians. Compiledfrom (S) Soroiuet al. [1970],(M) M•zatu et al. [1975], and(R) own data(Table
3). Ages from Soroiuet al. [1970] and Mfinzatuet al. [1975] were recalculatedwith the International
Union of GeologicalSciencesconstants accordingto Dalrymple[1979].
Manzatuet al. [1975]). Temperatures between300øand400øC successivedeformation events at nearly all stations.We
are inferred.Both muscoviteandbiotitewererejuvenatedin the differentiatedthree subsetson a regionalscale.Basedon local
upper Danubianunit, and amphiboleat leastpartially in the superpositioncriteria and regional consistentorientationof
lower Danubiannappes.Temperatures exceeded400øC. calculatedtensors,we interpretthe setsto representdifferent
We dated synkinematicmuscovitefrom an Alpine shear stressstatesacquiredthroughtime. We were,however,unsuc-
zonein the basementof the lower Danubianthrustsystemsouth cessful to demonstratethis superpositionsequenceat all
of the Haleg basin, and from a mylonitic metaarcose,a stations.
TABLE 2. CentralSouthCarpathians:
Locationof Stations
andParameters
of theDeviatoricStressTensor
Tertiary Basins
RO1-DEX inversion 22048'42" 45029'34" 21/21 072 73 167 02 258 17 0.22 14ø
RO10-DEX iteration 22050'55" 45030'26" 27/25 135 30 007 47 243 28 0.2 14ø
ROll-DEX iteration 22059'40" 45035'32" 15/15 330 10 076 58 234 30 0.7 10ø
RO13-DEX iteration 23059'40" 45035'32" 17/13 138 70 337 19 245 06 0.7 14ø
RO17-DEX P/T 23023'24" 45027'32" 25/25 310 01 217 66 040 24
RO17-SIN iteration 23023'24" 45027'32" 13/10 000 20 180 70 270 00 0.3 17ø
RO21-DEX P/T 23005'06" 45019'34" 08/08 132 06 020 75 223 14
RO23-DEX iteration 23005'34" 45019'54" 23/19 320 10 140 80 050 00 0.7 12ø
RO23-EW iteration 23005'34" 45019'54" 11/08 280 60 085 29 179 06 0.6 10ø
RO26-DEX iteration 23ø08'12" 45020'39" 09/08 150 10 273 72 057 15 0.3 12ø
CrystallineBasementRocks
RO3-DEX iteration 22054'35" 45028'22" 16/15 180 30 000 60 090 00 0.6 14ø
RO4-DEX P/T 22054' 17" 45025'33" 06/06 356 01 259 83 086 07
RO6-DEX iteration 22044' 14" 45020'52" 29/26 307 20 089 65 212 14 0.8 25ø
RO6-SIN iteration 22044' 14" 45020'52" 17/13 244 20 030 66 149 12 0.3 07ø
RO7-DEX iteration 22045' 37" 45023' 16" 27/19 120 00 030 72 210 18 0.7 15ø
RO7-SIN iteration 22045'37" 45023' 16" 17/16 060 00 150 60 330 30 0.2 10ø
RO9-DEX iteration 22ø49'01" 45026'57" 14/13 120 50 323 38 224 11 0.1 09ø
RO12-DEX iteration 22058'36" 45ø39'15" 13/10 332 70 139 19 230 04 0.6 13ø
RO12-SIN iteration 22058'36" 45039' 15" 13/11 225 30 355 48 119 26 0.9 10ø
RO12-EW iteration 22058'36" 45039' 15" 12/12 305 70 111 19 203 04 0.7 15ø
RO16-OLD-DEX iteration 23ø21'11" 45026'53" 21/17 318 20 212 37 070 47 0.2 15ø
RO16-YOU-DEX iteration 23021' 11" 45026'53" 21/19 120 10 226 58 024 30 0.5 11ø
RO25-DEX iteration 23008'05" 45ø21'17" 30/24 320 10 140 80 050 00 0.1 19ø
RO25-SIN P/T 23008'05" 45ø21'17" 06/06 197 18 326 63 100 20
RO25-EW iteration 23008'05" 45021' 17" 09/08 286 20 073 66 191 12 0.2 09ø
RO29-DEX iteration 23023'02" 45018'04" 56/50 206 80 340 07 071 07 0.6 13ø
RO29-EW iteration 23ø23'02" 45018'04" 09/07 240 10 122 70 333 17 0.1 14ø
RO34-DEX iteration 23050'34" 45025'55" 36/33 000 50 143 34 246 19 0.2 12ø
RO34-EW iteration 23050'34" 45025'55" 11/08 270 10 165 56 006 32 0.9 14ø
RO37-DEX iteration 24006'02" 45020'58" 60/50 130 10 236 58 034 30 0.9 21ø
RO38-DEX P/T 24006' 11" 45004' 12" 49/47 320 16 177 70 054 11
RO38-EW P/T 24006' 11" 45004' 12" 09/09 081 13 307 72 174 13
Permomesozoic Units
ROI5-DEX iteration 23ø13'18" 45ø26'51" 60/46 315 30 135 60 225 00 0.4 22ø
RO15-SIN P/T 23ø13'18" 45ø26'51" 15/15 177 20 005 70 268 02
RO18-DEX iteration 23ø01'51" 45019'28" 39/32 330 10 098 74 238 12 0.3 16ø
RO18-SIN iteration 23ø01'51" 45019'28" 34/26 169 30 349 60 079 00 0.6 13ø
RO18-EW iteration 23ø01'51" 45019'28" 12/09 080 00 350 55 170 35 0.8 20ø
RO22-DEX iteration 23004'57" 45020' 19" 32/23 138 20 279 65 042 14 0.3 20ø
RO22-SIN inversion 23004'57" 45020' 19" 10/10 210 26 336 50 105 28 0.92 05ø
RO22-EW iteration 23004'57" 45020' 19" 26/24 095 20 318 64 192 17 0.3 25ø
RO27-DEX P/T 23ø08'21" 45018'49" 20/20 307 02 151 88 037 01
RO30-DEX iteration 23022'58" 45ø21'56" 11/09 222 70 12602 035 20 0.6 05ø
RO31-DEX iteration 23024'35" 45028'23" 37/31 120 00 030 72 210 18 0.5 17ø
RO31-SIN iteration 23024'35" 45028'23" 28/27 200 10 082 70 293 17 0.6 11ø
RO32-DEX P/T 23ø27'41" 45024'50" 20/18 346 08 191 81 076 04
RO32-EW P/T 23ø27'41" 45024'50" 05/05 077 18 221 69 343 12
RO33-DEX iteration 23049' 11" 45025'35" 35/33 150 10 256 58 054 30 0.5 16ø
RO33-EW P/T 23049' 11" 45025'35" 24/23 097 18 305 70 190 09
RO35-DEX P/T 23053'30" 45026'02" 43/42 342 06 210 81 073 06
RO35-EW iteration 23ø53'30" 45026'02" 29/26 222 70 060 19 328 06 0.5 17ø
RO36-DEX iteration 23054'45" 45025'35" 19/14 332 70 152 10 062 00 0.9 14ø
RO36-EW inversion 23054'45" 45025'35" 05/05 098 24 206 35 341 45 0.68 07ø
Sitenumberslocate stations
in Figures 5 to 11.Letters
afterthesitenumber givesubsets
(set1 to 3, seetext)separated
froma single
faultpopulation:
EW:set1,
DEX: set2, SIN: set3. Number: first,number of measurements,second,number of measurementsusedfor calculation.
•-•3: azimuth(firstnumber)
andplunge
(secondnumber) of theprincipal
stress axes.StressratioR = (•2-03)(•-•3)
4 (1:uniaxial
extension,0: uniaxialshortening).
Fluctuation
F givestheaverage
angle
between the measured striae and the orientation of the calculated theoretical shear stress.
(Figure10b).The dextralmasterfaultsstrike95-110ø (Figure sampledoutsidethe main fault zone(e.g., RO6, RO7, RO9,
8, fault strike diagram,and Figure 10a), the averagecom- RO29).
pressiondirectiontrends143øñ16 ø (Figure8, stressorientation Basedon our mesoscale
data,we attemptedto determinethe
diagram).Dextralwrenchingis distributed throughout a broad relativeimportanceof reverse,strike-slip,and normalfaulting
deformationzone,typicalof deformationin continentalcrust. on a regionalscale.03 axesplungecloseto horizontalin all
Wider distributionof set 2 faultingas indicatedby the current sites, showing that the strike-slipand normal-sliptectonic
stateof mapping(Figures3b and 8) is evidentfrom stations regime dominated.The relative importanceof strike-slip,
Ratschbacher
et al.:SouthCarpathian
Orocline
Formation 863
Tertiarytectonics:E-W compression
Petrosani basin
.... '.......... .
i:"22
•J•r-'--'-'•'•-".'..•.:••••
• ••
jl•r compression
direction
(0.1) Z• extension
direction
(0'
3)
Vidra basin
'•i:'::'
3 ..•'•. ..,.. ..,..
g"'3".'.':':
? "Z-
RO18-EW - - 3 -
...................................................................................................................................................................
RO ; ..................................
Fig. 7. (continued)
normal, and minor reversefaulting,however,changesspatially, Fault striae data also provide evidence for local block
outliningtranstensional andtranspressional
segments.
Strike-slip rotation.StationsRO15 andRO16 (Figure8) showtwo groups
plays a dominantrole close to the ESE trendingmap-scale of predominantlydextralstrike-slipfaults,separatedin strikeby
fatfits(e.g., stationsRO10, RO32, RO33, RO35, RO37; Figure 300-40ø. The two groupsmay representthe samestressstate,
8). Dextral-obliquereversefaultingandfoldingdominatesalong but may have rotateddifferentiallyduringprogressivedextral
E to NE trending segments.Accordingly,we interpretthe wrenching (raw data were not separatedinto subsetsfor
northwesternmarginof the Petro•anibasinas a major dextral- calculationin RO15, but wereseparated in RO16: RO16-OLD,
oblique reverse fault zone (e.g., station RO25, Figure 8; RO16-YOU). StationRO34 (Figure8) may representa small-
compareto Berza and Draganescu,[1988]). Its northeastern scale block, rotated and tilted along the major dextral strand
part is probably part of a major triangularpop-up structure (represented by stationsRO33 and RO35).
(e.g., stationsRO15, RO16, RO31), markingan interruptionof The stressratio R (Table 2; Figure8, stressratio diagram)
the master fault zone (Figures 3b and 8). Transtensional varies and indicatesthat pure strike-slipand pure normal-slip
segmentstrend NW and, for example,delineatethe southern rarely occurred.The calculatedratios imply that both vertical
part of the Hateg basin(e.g., stationsRO10, Figure9, which and horizontal compressivestress interacted (local {J•-lJ2
providesa recordof fatfiringand f-acturingin poorly sorted, permutation).A comparisonof resultsof the quantitativefault
Paleogeneconglomerateswith red argillaceousmatrix, and striaeanalysisand of qualitativestraingauges(tensiongashes,
RO3, ROll, RO12, RO13, Figure8). boudinage and fold axes) points to a simple stress-strain
Ratschbacher
etal.' South
Carpathian
Orocline
Formation 865
Tertiarytectonics:dextralstrike-slipfaulting
Ha•eg
basin.,. ....
..:..,..::•
..--
"!:iiiiii.,.,....:..•iiiiiiii!!iiiililil
!
:"•:i;:i:•
"'"' •::r n=31
•o. 3
:::..
.......... :::::::::::::::::::::
ß13'" ' ß
o
1
5 km
Petro,•ani basin
3 km
Vidra basin
Brezoi
..... - 5 km
compression
direction
(0'
1) • extension
direction
(0.3)
• extension
direction
(e
3)
Fig. 8. Large-scaleMiocenedextralstrike-slipfaultingalongthenorthernmarginof theMoesianforeland.
SeeFigure7 for explanation of symbolsanddiagrams.
analogy.Bothe3 (minimumcontraction) and03, ande] (maxi- distributednatureof faulting,we speculatethat the totaloffset
mum contraction)and o] axescorrespond (Figures8 and 9). is not very large, but probably>t0 km.
No quantificationof the amountof displacement is possible Set 3 fault striaedatacompriseonly a smallportionof the
at this stage of structuralanalysis(further tracinginto the total data and recordmainly sinistralstrike-slipfaultingwith
easternand westernSouthCarpathians is required).Due to the NNE trending01 (01: 205_+25ø; Figurett). Relatedlarge-scale
866 Ratschbacher
et al.: SouthCarpathian
Orocline
Formation
RO 17-DEX R - 2'
............................................................................................................................................................................................
Permomesozoic rocks
RO15-DEX 1 - 2 -
3- 3- 3-
Fig. 8. (continued)
structures have not been identified so far. Mesoscale structures deformationhistoryof the Cema-Jiufault system[Berzaand
indicatesinistralreactivationof dextral-oblique
reversefaults Drilganescu,1988]. Deformationof Paleogene-early Miocene
along the northernmarginof the Petroõanibasin.Spectacular stratain the Petro•aniandHaleg basinsby set2 fracturingand
overprinting structuresoccur at station RO31, where dextral faulting(Petro•anibasin:overthrustingalongthenorthwestern
faults,showingmajordisplacements (e.g.thickfaultgauge),are margin,rightsteppingoffsetof thebasement-basin contact,and
reactivatedor overprintedduringsinistral,generallysmall-scale sigmoidalbendingof beddingstrike, stationsRO17, RO21,
displacement(fibrous calcite behind fault steps). At other RO23, RO26; Haleg basin:stationROll, Figure8) dates
stationsno convincingoverprintingrelationshiphasbeenfound. dextralmotionasMioceneor younger.A seriesof poorlydated,
Set 1 faultingaffectedthe (Chattian)basalsediments of the Miocene basinsare lined up along the major dextralfault zone
Petro•anibasin;it probablyrepresents a stagein theprolonged (Figure 3b; Haleg, Dealu Babii, Vidra, Titeõti-Brezoibasins)
Ratschbacher
etal.:South
Carpathian
Orocline
Formation 867
R - 16
R01- •RO34-DE./•••
3 -
'%0o ..'2'0
stress orientation
Fig. 8. (continued)
[Pop, 1963; Marinescuand Popescu,1978; Moisescu,1980; tOlYto-NE shearingparallel to the presentstrike of the belt
Nichiforescuet al., 1984]. Two-stagesubsidence characterizes (average054ø) as indicatedby highvaluesof principalstretch,
both the Petro•aniand the Haleg basins:late Oligocene-early the average059ø trendof the regionalstretching lineation,and
Miocene and late Miocene. Unfortunately,litfie is published noncoaxialflow criteria(firstAlpinedeformation;Figures4 and
about the history of these basins. Age constraintsare not 5); (2) coaxialflatteningwithin thenorthwest(unlessrefolded)
availablefor set 3 faulting. dipping foliation implied by consistentlyoblate finite strain
(Figure4); (3) progressivedeformationand exhumationof the
DISCUSSION thrust system during the Late Cretaceousand Paleogene.
Ductile-brittleobliquethrustingand wrenching(secondAlpine
Deformation in the central South Carpathiansshowsthe deformation)is followedby brittledextralwrenchingwith E-W
following characteristics:
(1) Late Early and Late Cretaceous compression and N-S extension,mostlyconfinedto the Cema-
868 Ratschbacher
etal.:South
Carpathian
Orocline
Formation
R010
cleavage
s:168/81
• .._,. m.
ain
fault
tg:246/76• • tg:251/71
tension gashes
P-shear 10cm R010
f: 238/60 f:208/85
normal faults
Fig. 9. Fieldsketches
andorientation
of deformation
structures
in Paleogene
conglomerates
of the
southwestern
Halegbasin(northof therailwaytracksnearBucova).
SeeFigure7 for explanation
of
diagrams.
a
natural pattern
a progressive deformation model(stages1-5 below)at thescale
o'1 _3 R'
of the southernpart of the orogenicbend (Figure 12).
1. Up to the late Early Cretaceous,intraoceanic
subduction
14••}-/'
4
ø'3
2
with probablysouthwestward directedunderthrusting
wasactive
between Europe-Moesiaon one side and East Carpathia-
Rhodopia(Gefic fragment)on the other side (stage1, Figure
Y 12) [cf. S/lndulescu,1988; Dercourt et al., 1986; Burchfiel,
1980].
2. After obducfionof oceanic crust (ophiolific rocks of
1: poleto beddinginTertiarysediments Severinnappe)ontoMoesia(Danubiannappes),thedeformation
2: strikeof majorthrusts became intracontinental,and intensedeformationtook place
3: contraction from folds
4: strikeof majornormalfaults along the collisionzone. The existenceof a recessin the
forelandimpliesthedevelopment of a comerat thewestern tip
b theoretical
pattern of Moesia(stage2, Figure12).Progressivedeformation caused
a superpositionof deformation
components duringformation of
/ •3 • the SouthCarpathian orocline[Marshak,1988].For example,
site1 (stage2, Figure12)mayhaveexperienced thefollowing
deformation sequence:(1) Thrusting
duringfrontalcollision;
(2)
transpression, with dextral wrench shearing,horizontal
'¾'•d•-/ In•rmal •R shortening,
andverticallengtheningactingtogethercontinuously
• faults
duringcollision
withandlateraltranslation
alongMoesia;(3)
c i: incremental stress axes tangential
stretching
(orocline
formation)
andspreading
intothe
recessnortheastof Moesia. Even in a simple homogeneous
Fig. 10. (a) Illustrationof the relationship
betweenstructural deformation model, the deformation matrix involves thrust
elementsand strainm•d stressorientationmeasuredalong the simpleshear,wrenchsimpleshear,andpureshearcomponents,
Miocenedextralstrike-slipzone(set2 fault striaedata)along havingoperatedduringtranspression, tangentialstretching,
the northernmarginof Moesia.(b) Theoretical orientation
of spreading,and,possibly,
volumeloss.Ourobservational data
principaland secondaryshearfractures,fold axestrend,and baseprecludesanyattemptof factorization
of finitedeformation
strike of normal and thrust faults in a dextral wrench zone with into thesecomponents(i.e., a quantitativediscussionof the
100 ø strike.
observed finite strain in terms of superposedincremental
deformation).
A significantpureshearcomponent,
however, had
to be presentto explaintheoblatestrainandthecoaxialflow
Jiu faultsystem(Figure5 andset1 faultstriaedata,Figure7) component (Figures4 and5).
[cf. Berza and Dr/iganescu,1988]; (4) large-scale Miocene Our deformation model stressesthe comer function of the
dextralwrenching alongthenorthern marginof Moesia(Figures Moesianplatform.Due to thepinningof the collisionfrontat
3b, 8, and9); (5) late-stage
N-S compression (Figure11). the westerntip of Moesia,the thrustsystemshows(1) an
The studyareaconstitutes a partof thesouthernbranchof increase
in thedipapproachingthecomer(i.e.,thrusts
dipmore
the Alpine-Carpathian orogenicbend.In the following,the shallow where the collisionis frontal than where it is highly
presented data(structures, strain,kinematics,stress)
areinte- oblique;stage2, Figure12),and(2) a progressive
curvatureof
gratedandobservations andinterpretationsareusedtoconstrain the cartographictraceof the thrusts.The changein dip and
Ratschbacher
et al.: SouthCarpathianOroclineFormation 869
Late Tertiarytectonics
Petrosani basin
$.- --m- m
I ,
'•.....,.•'.... ...
::"' -
3 km
Fig. 11.Late-stage(probablyPliocene-earlyPleistocene)
NNE-SSWcompression connectedwith sinistral
strike-slipfaultingwhichreactivatesformerthrustsin the Hal;egandPetro•anibasinsarea(set 3 fault-
striaedata). SeeFigure 7 for explanationof symbolsand diagrams.
strike of the thrustzone reflectsthe changefrom the thrust- along the concaveside,leadingto subsidencealongthe convex
dominated to the wrench-dominatedregime. Stacking and and uplift alongthe concaveside.Figure 13b showsthe mean
wrenchingis late Early to Late Cretaceousas indicatedby stress distribution derived from a model calculation with a low
synchronismof deformationwith Alpine metamorphismand frictioncoefficientto induceslip alongthe entirestretchof the
coolingof the thrustsystem. fault [afterSchultzand Aydin, 1990].
3. Subructionof continentalcrust terminatedalong the Another possibilityis that the Petro•anibasin developed
(south)westernmargin of Moesia due to buoyancyreasons. during orogenicbending.This hypothesispredictsdeep, V-
Furtherconvergence duringtheearlyTertiarycauseddislocation shaped,outwardswideningbasinsat the insideof fault apices
of the previously welded East Carpathian-Rhodopian and (Figure 13c). Such a basin is inconsistent with the shallow
Moesianfragments
alongtheCerna-Jiufaultsystem(seeabove) depthand the shape(longfault paralleloutcroppattern)of the
and the further northeasttranslationof the westernsegment. Petro•anibasin.Additionally,theoroclinalbendingwouldhave
Due to the shapeof the Moesian promontory,the Cerna-Jiu producedoppositeslip alongthe strandslocatedon bothsides
fault systemacquireda northwesterly convextraceat thepoint of the apex of the bend, which is not observed.
where the foreland recess allowed advance of material toward We interpret the Petro•ani basin as a northeasterly
east (Figure 13a). One may comparethe basin location to progradingpull-apartstructureformingsuccessively alongthe
regionsof meanstressreductionalongcurvingstrike-slipfaults. curvingtraceof the Cerna-Jiufault system(Figure13d). Set 1
Schultzand Aydin [1990] demonstrated that mean stressis fault striae data portray the state of stressduring the dextral
reducedalong the convex side of a fault bend and increased strike-slipand N-S openingof half grabens,reportedfrom the
870 Ratschbacher
et al.:SouthCarpathian
Orocline
Formation
Permomesozoic rocks
RO 15-SI 1 - _ -
Fig.11 (continued)
Petroõanibasin[BerzaandDr•tg/tnescu, 1988].Note thatthere principally driven by extensionin the central and eastern
is a spatialrelation of set 1 structuresto the Cema-Jiufault Pannonian basinsandtheblockconsisting of theTransylvanian
system(Figure7), andit is, at leastin a few stations,indicated basinandtheApusenimountains wastranslated relativelyrigid
that set 1 reprsentsthe pre- to syn-Petro•ani basinformation southeastward. Dextral-obliqueconvergence acrossthe South
stress.Both the Jiul de Est - Sadulineament(Figure3b) [cf. Carpathians seemedtherebyto be decoupled intoa component
Berzaand Dr,'tg/tnescu,1988] andthe imbricationzoneeastof of convergencenormal and a shearcomponentalong to the
thePetro•anibasinmaycomprise continuations
of theCema-Jiu plateboundaryas commonlyobservedin accretionary wedges
fault system. Sedimentationin the Petro•anibasin dates whereplateconvergence is oblique[e.g.,McCaffrey,1992]. In
wrenching alongtheCema-Jiufaultsystem asPaleogene-early the case of the South Carpathiansthe normal componentis
Neogene. takenup by the slightlytmnspressional thrustbelt of the Getic
4. A reorientation of the stress field from a W-E to a NW- depressionand the strike-slip componentby the studied
SE compression occurredduringtheMiocenealongtheSouth transcurrentfault zone (Figure 12, stage3 lower right) and a
Carpathians (stage3, Figure 12) due to a tighteningof the similarzone, which we suspectto the northof the studyarea.
oroclineand/ora rearrangement of microplategeometry(e.g., Cretaceous thrustingandwrenching, Paleogene wrenching,
subduction roll-backin theEastCarpathians)[Doglioni,1992]. and Miocene transcurrent motion are all associated with
It led to the development of the large-scaledextralwrench clockwiserotationof materialaroundverticalaxesaspredicted
zone. We tentativelysuggestthat the fault zone was active for true oroclines[e.g., Eldredgeet al., 1985;Marshak,1988].
coevallywith the formationof the Pannonianbasinsystem. The rotationsdemonstrated by paleomagnetic results(Figure2a)
Note, however,thatthefault zonedoesnot compensate for the [P,'ttra•cuet al., 1990] are larger (circa 80ø) north of the
differential displacement between the South and East Moesian platform than at its western tip (circa 45ø) in
Carpathians imposedby extensionin the Transylvanian basin. accordance with the orocline model.
The latteris, unliketherestof thePannonianbasins,principally Our recognition
of two stagesof first-order
motion(late
a thermal sag basin and showslittle lithosphereextension EarlytoLateCretaceous
ductile-brittle
thrustingandwrenching
[RoydenandD6v6nyi,1988].We propose thatthrustingin the andMiocene wrenching)is corroborated
byindependent
plate
southernEastCarpathians (Figure12, stage3 upperfight) was motionstudies.
Figure2c,derived
fromDercourt
et al. [1986],
Ratschbacher
et al.: SouthCarpathian
OreclineFormation 871
stage 1 stage 2
Early Cretaceous late Earlyto Late Cretaceous
a) '::ß • :::::::::::::::::::::::
ß "i _•i:i: .•!:!:!:i:i:!:i:i:
ø'i";'i':'i':'•:'•"g"i"i":•':i':•':':':':':':':':':':':':': ...........
Apuseni
mountains
stage 3 ,.:::::::::::::::::
Transylvanian
basin
Miocene "•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•
-.::::::::::::::::: Vienna
•:::::::::::::::::
...........................................
ß=====================================================================
o-1
basinisopaches
Hateg 50 km
•• GeticdepressionPloiesti
Fig.12.Progressive
deformation
model at thescale
of thesouthern
partof theCarpathian
orecline.
Palcomagnetic
datafromFgttra,scu
et al. [1990]anddisplacement
pathtrajectory
modelfororoclines
modified
fromMarshak
[1988].Stage1:subduction.
Stage2: collision-transpression-dextral
wrenching.
Numbersindicate
depth
(inkilometers)
of a mainthrust
plane. Tectonic
history
of site1 isdiscussed
in
text.Stage3:subduction
roll-back
intheEastCarpathians
andsoutheastward
translation
oftheApuseni
mountains - Transylvanian
basinblockdriven
byextensioninthecentral
andeastern
Pannonianbasins.
Oblique convergence
across
theSouth Carpathians
isdecoupledintotranspressional
thrusting
andfolding
along theGeticdepression
andwrench shear
alongthenorthern
margin ofMoesia.
Notethattheorogenic
arcdeveloped during
stage
1 to3 isasymmetric
duetodischronous
endingofconvergence
around it.See
text for discussion.
SouthandEastCarpathians to quantifytheamountandtiming
"::::: ßß of theinvolveddisplacements,
andnumericalandexperimental
curved fault trace investigationsto understandthe mechanicsof the Moesian
due to corner ...... t•/_t basin formation comerin the Alpine-Carpathianevolution.
'.5:::
Petro•ani
basin •_..*•.-.
- '"
model •ii!:i•etro•ani basin Faultsizeandattitude,striaeorientation,senseof slip,and
ß':':':':':':':':-:':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':
v3 polyphase slip and its chronologywere measuredand
.....•:::..
.. . .:4 determinedin the field. Fault size is classifiedqualitatively
based on an estimationof the displacementand the lateral
extent of the fault. The aim was to discriminate first-order
Fig. 13. (a) Model for the Cema-Jiufault systemas a curved We usedthreemethodsto deriveprincipalstress
orientations
strike-slipfault dueto theMoesiancomer.The bendbeginsat and ratios from fault-striae data. (1) The "direct inversion
the point where the forelandrecessallowedadvanceof material method"[Angelier,1979]. (2) The "gridsearchmethod"[Hard-
toward east. (b) Mean stressdistributionaround a curved fault castle and Hills, 1990]. Parameters chosen for the Mohr-
trace[fromSchultzandAydin,1990].Contours of 10%change Coulombyield criterion(x > C + [tOn)testare C = 0, because
in mean stresslabeledD (down,potentialsubsidence) and U we assumepreexistingweaknesses (faults,fractures,bedding
(uplift). Model calculationwith g = 0.4 (frictioncoefficien0 planes),and g = 0.2 to 0.4 (dependingon the rock type
alongthefault.(c) Sketchshowing basins produced by oroclinal analyzedand the presenceof fault gouge),which is closeto
bending.Note that this mechanismrequiresoppositedirected naturalobservation [Zobacket al., 1987]. (3) The "pressure-
slip locatedon both sidesof the apexof thebend,whichis not tension(P-T) axesmethod"[e.g., Allmendingeret al., 1989].
observedin the SouthCarpathians. (d) Developmentof the Conditionedleast squaresfitting is used to derive ortho-
Petro•anibasin as a northeastward
propagating
pull-apart gonalizedloci of o• to 03 [Caputoand Caputo,1988].
structurealongthe curvingtraceof theCema-Jiufault system. The quality and the quantityof field data determined the
selection of the method used for calculation. The P-T axes
method was used with scarce data and where insufficient time
Burchfiel,1980].We relatelate-stage N-S compression (set3 wasavailablein the field for carefulanalysisof faultandstriae
fault-striae
data,Figure11)toPliocene-early
Pleistocenefolding characteristics.A comparisonof methods is given by
alongthe northernmarginof Moesia. Ratschbacheret al. [1993]. The data base for our calulationsis
We concludethatthecomereffectof theMoesianplatform available from the first author.
duringAlpine convergence explainsthe main geometricand
kinematicfeaturesof the centralSouthCarpathians.
It induced
an associationof deformationcomponents, e.g., plate motion Acknowledgments. Field work was funded by the
driven thrust and wrench shear, pure shear stretchdue to Universities of Tdbingen (through the German Foreign
oroclinebending,andpureshearflatteningduringtranspression ExchangeService)andCluj. IstvanGy6rfi sharedhisfield data.
and gravity drivenradial flow of materialinto the recessnorth Frank Horv,'ith drew the attention of the German authors to the
of Moesia. The study also demonstrates a successive stress Alpine-Carpathian
connection
and helpedlogistically.L•s16
reorientationduringprogressive deformationaroundthe comer. Csontosand Carlo Doglioni providedexcellentreviews,and
Our preliminaryresultsshouldprovokemorefield work in the WolfgangFrischfundedthe radiometricwork.
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