Salassic

Darstellung und Status

Farbe CMYK
N/A
Farbe RGB
R: 241 G: 239 B: 237
Rang
tektonische Domäne
Gebrauch
Element ist in Gebrauch
Status
gültig
Diskussion des Status

Nomenklatur

Deutsch
Salassikum
Français
Salassique
Italiano
Salassico
English
Salassic
Herkunft des Namens

This term stems from a Celtic tribe, the Salasses, who settled in the Valle d’Aosta and the Sesia region, at the same time as the Helvetians north of the Alps and the Lepontians between Val d’Ossola and Leventina.

Historische Varianten

Cervinia (Froitzheim), sistema Sesia-Dent Blanche (Bearth 1980), Austro-Alpine thrust system of the Western Alps (dal Piaz 1993), Salassic (Gouffon et al. 2024)

Beschreibung

Beschreibung

Die lithostratigraphische Einheiten die das Salassikum bilden stammen paläogeographisch aus ein Mikrokontinent im Piemont-Ligurischen Ozean.

Paläogeografie und Tektonik

Paläogeografie
Cervinia Terrane :

terrane or continental fragment

Tektonische Einheit (bzw. Überbegriff)
Herkunftstyp
  • tektonisch

Referenzen

Erstdefinition
Gouffon Yves (Editor) (2024) : Tectonic Map of Switzerland 1:500000, Explanatory notes. Federal Office of Topography swisstopo, Wabern

p.79: The Dent Blanche, Mont Mary and Sesia nappes in western Switzerland and adjacent Italy, together with the Margna and Sella nappes in southeastern Switzerland and partly in Italy, have an Adriatic paleogeographic affinity, as demonstrated by Staub (1917). However, their tectono-metamorphic history is quite different from those of the other Adriatic-derived units (Austroalpine and South Alpine domains). They show signs of high-pressure metamorphism as evidence of their subduction below the Austroalpine and South Alpine units (Froitzheim et al. 1996 b, Schmid et al. 2004, Handy et al. 2010) in Late Cretaceous times. Highpressure metamorphism in some of the Austroalpine nappes in Austria is older; the South Alpine units lack such an Alpine metamorphic overprint. On the other hand, the high-pressure metamorphism of the Upper Penninic units, derived from the Piemonte-Liguria Ocean, is Cenozoic (see § 6.2.3), and therefore younger than that of the nappes mentioned above.
These particular continent-derived basement units are interpreted as originating from a continental fragment that split off from the most distal part of the Adriatic margin during the Middle Jurassic opening of the Piemonte-Liguria Ocean. This extensional allochthon is referred to as the Cervinia Terrane (Pleuger et al. 2007, Froitzheim et al. 2008; see Pl. III) or the Margna-Sesia fragment (Schmid et al. 2004).
Because of their Adriatic affinity, these tectonic units are classically attributed to the Austroalpine. The Dent Blanche, Mont Mary and Sesia nappes, situated in the Western Alps, are sometimes grouped together under the term of “Austroalpine tectonic system of the Western Alps” (Dal Piaz & Ernst 1978, Bigi et al. 1990). As they occupy a transitional position between the Austroalpine and the Penninic, they have also been attributed to the Upper Penninic (Froitzheim et al. 2008) or to a subdomain called “Ultrapenninic” (Trümpy 1992).
Given the ambivalence regarding their attribution and the specificity of their tectono-metamorphic history, it seems appropriate to group the tectonic units derived from this extensional allochthon into a new domain (1st order, see § 1.1.1) called “Salassic”. This term stems from a Celtic tribe, the Salasses, who settled in the Valle d’Aosta and the Sesia region, at the same time as the Helvetians north of the Alps and the Lepontians between Val d’Ossola and Leventina.

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