The Messinian primary gypsum sequence, formed during the first stage of the salinity crisis in the Caltanissetta basin (Sicily), is characterized by a high degree of disruption and deformation. The primary gypsum occurs as huge (up to 3 km large and up to 250 m high) tilted blocks, detached from their stratigraphic base, floating within a matrix of folded shales and clastic gypsum. This association represents a giant chaotic unit lying unconformably on the Gela Nappe, the youngest structural unit of the Maghrebian fold-and-thrust belt. The origin of the deformations affecting the Primary Lower Gypsum unit is still debated; in the past they have been related to intra-Messinian tectonics or to the collapse of primary gypsum platforms due dissolution of interbedded to halite. Our study on the distribution, size and bedding of the gypsum blocks reveals a pattern similar to that of modern giant submarine mass-transport deposits, which may have been triggered by a combination of active tectonics and sea-level change, and favored by the strong mechanical contrasts of the involved units. The chaotic unit shows a downslope evolution from the south, characterized by elongated blocks with their main axes parallel to the inferred slide headwall (NW-SE oriented), to intermediate and distal areas, where the blocks become progressively smaller in size with their main axes parallel to the flow (SW-NE). We identify the source area as either a shallow evaporitic basin above the Gela Nappe or on the Pelagian foreland ramp. A general implication for the Messinian salinity crisis is that no primary gypsum was deposited in deep water basins during the first stage; instead, during the second stage, large gypsum blocks collapsed from the basin margin and were mass-transported into a deeper water setting, where halite was depositing.

Large-scale mass-transport deposits recording the collapse of an evaporitic platform during the Messinian salinity crisis (Caltanissetta basin, Sicily) / Manzi, V.; Roveri, M.; Argnani, A.; Cowan, D.; Lugli, S.. - In: SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY. - ISSN 0037-0738. - 424:(2021), p. 106003.106003. [10.1016/j.sedgeo.2021.106003]

Large-scale mass-transport deposits recording the collapse of an evaporitic platform during the Messinian salinity crisis (Caltanissetta basin, Sicily)

Manzi V.;Roveri M.;Argnani A.;Lugli S.
2021-01-01

Abstract

The Messinian primary gypsum sequence, formed during the first stage of the salinity crisis in the Caltanissetta basin (Sicily), is characterized by a high degree of disruption and deformation. The primary gypsum occurs as huge (up to 3 km large and up to 250 m high) tilted blocks, detached from their stratigraphic base, floating within a matrix of folded shales and clastic gypsum. This association represents a giant chaotic unit lying unconformably on the Gela Nappe, the youngest structural unit of the Maghrebian fold-and-thrust belt. The origin of the deformations affecting the Primary Lower Gypsum unit is still debated; in the past they have been related to intra-Messinian tectonics or to the collapse of primary gypsum platforms due dissolution of interbedded to halite. Our study on the distribution, size and bedding of the gypsum blocks reveals a pattern similar to that of modern giant submarine mass-transport deposits, which may have been triggered by a combination of active tectonics and sea-level change, and favored by the strong mechanical contrasts of the involved units. The chaotic unit shows a downslope evolution from the south, characterized by elongated blocks with their main axes parallel to the inferred slide headwall (NW-SE oriented), to intermediate and distal areas, where the blocks become progressively smaller in size with their main axes parallel to the flow (SW-NE). We identify the source area as either a shallow evaporitic basin above the Gela Nappe or on the Pelagian foreland ramp. A general implication for the Messinian salinity crisis is that no primary gypsum was deposited in deep water basins during the first stage; instead, during the second stage, large gypsum blocks collapsed from the basin margin and were mass-transported into a deeper water setting, where halite was depositing.
2021
Large-scale mass-transport deposits recording the collapse of an evaporitic platform during the Messinian salinity crisis (Caltanissetta basin, Sicily) / Manzi, V.; Roveri, M.; Argnani, A.; Cowan, D.; Lugli, S.. - In: SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY. - ISSN 0037-0738. - 424:(2021), p. 106003.106003. [10.1016/j.sedgeo.2021.106003]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11381/2933219
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