18759_2.csv (3 kB)View fileThis item contains files with download restrictions
DATASET
18759_3.csv (1.56 kB)View fileThis item contains files with download restrictions
DOCUMENT
18759_4.rtf (146.42 kB)View fileThis item contains files with download restrictions
DATASET
18759_5.csv (10.59 kB)View fileThis item contains files with download restrictions
DATASET
18759_6.csv (5.44 kB)View fileThis item contains files with download restrictions
DOCUMENT
18759_7.pdf (36.46 kB)View fileThis item contains files with download restrictions
DOCUMENT
18759_8.pdf (39.84 kB)View fileThis item contains files with download restrictions
DOCUMENT
18759_9.pdf (24.61 kB)View fileThis item contains files with download restrictions
DOCUMENT
18759_10.pdf (24.55 kB)View fileThis item contains files with download restrictions
DOCUMENT
18759_11.pdf (26.91 kB)View fileThis item contains files with download restrictions
Next page
Previous page
1/1
Switch ViewSwitch between different file views
Thumbnail viewList viewFile view
11 filesFullscreen
Late Jurassic amphibolite-facies metamorphism in the Intra-Pontide Suture Zone (Turkey): an eastward extension of the Vardar
Ocean from the Balkans into Anatolia?
posted on 2016-06-21, 11:39authored byM. Marroni, C. Frassi, M. C. Göncüoğlu, G. Di Vincenzo, L. Pandolfi, G. Rebay, A. Ellero, G. Ottria
The palaeogeography of Neotethys during its closure is still a matter of debate. This study provides new insights into the
Neotethys closure by the discovery in the Intra-Pontide Suture Zone (Turkey) of an accretionary complex that recorded a Late
Jurassic (c. 163 Ma) amphibolite-facies metamorphism. Results are discussed in the framework of the accretionary events that occurred
at the southern margin of Laurasia. The resulting picture supports a new model in which the Vardar suture zone, in the Balkans,
and the Intra-Pontide Suture Zone, in Anatolia, represent remnants of the same elongate oceanic basin.