«Unità del Lucomagno»

Retour à Falda della Leventina-Lucomagno

Représentation et statut

Couleur CMYK
N/A
Couleur RGB
R: 241 G: 239 B: 237
Rang
nappe
Usage
Ce terme est en usage.
Status
terme informel
Discussion du statut

Nomenclature

Deutsch
«Lucomagno-Einheit»
Français
«Unité du Lukmanier»
Italiano
«Unità del Lucomagno»
English
«Lucomagno Unit»
Origine du nom

Passo del Lucomagno (TI)

Variantes historiques

Lucomagnomassiv (Jenny et al. 1923), Lucomagnodecke (Bosshard 1925), Lucomagno-Decke (Gansser & Dal Vesco 1964), Ricoprimento Lucomagno (Bianconi 1971), Lucomagno-Masse (Büchi & Trümpy 1976), falda del Lucomagno, Lucomagno unit (Böhm et al. 1996), Lucomagno Nappe (Berger et al. 2017)

Description

Description

Involucro paragneissico a misto della falda Leventina-Lucomagno (metapelitischer Paragneis, gebänderter Gneis, Augengneis).

Hiérarchie et succession

Unités hiérarchiquement subordonnées

Âge

Âge au sommet
  • Mésozoïque
Âge à la base
  • Précambrien

Paléogéographie et tectonique

Paléogéographie
plaque continentale européenne
Termes génériques

Références

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

p.50: The Leventina-Lucomagno Nappe is the lowest unit of the Ticino Culmination. The lower part of the nappe (“Leventina Unit”) is made up of several orthogneisses forming a deformed Late Variscan magmatic edifice composed of several magmatic pulses. Along the northeastern flank of the Valle Leventina, the Leventina orthogneisses are covered by a thick stack of paragneisses and micaschists (“Lucomagno Unit”). Along this boundary, sparse quartzitic gneisses (“roof quartzites”) were interpreted as being Mesozoic in age by several authors and hence used to discriminate between a “Leventina Nappe” and a “Lucomagno Nappe”. However, these quartz-rich horizons above the orthogneisses form metasomatically altered zones – in places sheared – and cannot be considered as Mesozoic metasediments (Rütti et al. 2005; see Fig. 7). The “Lucomagno Unit” can therefore be regarded as a pre-Alpine sedimentary shell of the Leventina magmatic edifice deformed during the Alpine orogeny. Quartzitic horizons, similar to those mentioned above, also occur where the Simano Nappe directly overlies the Leventina orthogneisses. The northern part of this nappe contact is often characterized by a mylonitic band (Rütti et al. 2005 and ref. therein). To the south, this mylonitic shear zone dissipates within the Leventina orthogneisses in an anastomosing network of shear bands (Fig. 7). There, the upper limit of the Leventina-Lucomagno Nappe is difficult to trace since paragneiss and calcsilicate lenses – traditionally used to trace the tectonic contact – are in fact deformed xenoliths within the Leventina orthogneisses.
Remnants of Triassic rocks crop out around the frontal part of the Leventina-Lucomagno Nappe, although for some of them it is not clear whether they belong to the Leventina-Lucomagno Nappe or to the adjacent units. Permo-Triassic metasediments crop out also within the Leventina-Lucomagno Nappe, likely as pinched synclines (e.g., Molare Syncline; see Fig. 7) or as intranappe slices.

  • zona del (Pizzo) Molare

    Name Origin

    Pizzo Molare (TI)

    Rang
    zone tectonique
    Statut
    terme informel
    Nomenclatorial Remarks
    <p>Jeannet ----, Alb. Heim 1922</p>
    En bref

    Mesozoische Sedimentbedeckung der Lukmanier-Decke: Trias, Bündnerschiefer.

    Age
    Trias
  • Cristallino di Prato-Cornone

    Name Origin

    Prato-Leventina (TI)

    Rang
    unité lithostratigraphique délimitée tectoniquement
    Statut
    terme informel
    En bref

    Cristallino della falda Lucomagno: paragneiss scistoso leuco-mesocratico a grana fine, ricco di quarzo, a plagioclasio, due miche, o a biotite, e granato, con marcata tessitura planare-tabulare.

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