Neotectonic development of the Çameli Basin, southwestern Anatolia, Turkey

Author:

Alçiçek Mehmet Cihat1,Ten Veen Johan H.23,Özkul Mehmet1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geological Engineering, Pamukkale University 20070 Denizli, Turkey alcicek@pamukkale.edu.tr

2. Faculty of Earth and Life Sciences, Free University de Boelelaan 1085, 1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands

3. Institute for Geology, Mineralogy and Geophysics Universitätsstrasse 190, D-44-801, Bochum, Germany

Abstract

AbstractThis study of the Çameli Basin presents a detailed basin evolution combined with structural analysis and provides the first detailed time-stratigraphic framework for the neotectonic development of Neogene grabens along the Fethiye-Burdur Fault Zone in southwestern Anatolia. During the Early Tortonian, the Çameli Basin was established as a broad fault-bounded fluviolacustrine basin that experienced NW-SE extension. By Mid-Pliocene time, continued NW-SE extension resulted in the formation of a new intrabasinal fault zone that split the basin longitudinally into two compartments. The development of a new generation of normal faults further split the basin into four narrow half-graben compartments at the end of the Late Pliocene. Structural analysis of basin-bounding and intrabasinal faults related to this three-stage basin development shows that NW-SE extension apparently persisted from Late Miocene to early Quaternary time. The youngest (i.e. Holocene), deformation is characterized by dextral shear along NE-SW-trending strikeslip faults and continuing NW-SE extension. The Late Miocene foundering of the basin was related to extension in the northerly hinterland zone of the still-emplacing Lycian nappes, whereas outward growth of the Hellenic Arc in response to the westward Anatolian extrusion is the main cause for NW-SE extension from the Pliocene onward. Dextral strike-slip faulting is localized and is associated with the activity of NW-SE-trending faults that accommodated NE-SW extension. The simultaneous activity of these faults suggests the existence of biaxial extensional tectonics, as initially proposed for the Burdur-Dinar area. Sinistral strike-slip faulting, continuing along the eastern Hellenic Arc, penetrated the southernmost part of Turkey but has not yet reached the Çameli Basin area. Our biostratigraphically well-constrained tectonosedimentary model for the evolution of the Çameli Basin provides a reliable time-stratigraphic framework for NE-SW extension in the ‘Fethiye-Burdur Fault Zone’ of SW Anatolia. We believe that this fault zone represents a broad zone of isolated or interconnected NE-SW-trending basins that formed under prevailing NW-SE extension, rather than being a significant strike-slip fault zone.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

Reference59 articles.

1. Geological and archaeological evidence for post-Roman earthquake surface faulting at Cibyra, SW Turkey

2. Alçiçek M. C. (2001) Sedimentological investigation of Çameli Basin (Late Miocene-Late Pliocene, Denizli, SW Anatolia. PhD thesis (Ankara University).

3. Alçiçek M. C. Özkul M. (2005) Proceedings of the First International Symposium on Travertines and Technologies Exhibition, Proceedings (21–25 September, Denizli, Turkey), Extensional faulting induced tufa precipitation in the Neogene Çameli Basin of southwestern Anatolia, Turkey, eds Özkul M. Yag̈iz S. Jones B. pp 120–127.

4. Strike-slip faulting in the Çameli basin, southwestern Turkey: implications for inland transform prolongation of the Hellenic subduction zone;Alçiçek;Abstracts with Programs,2002

5. Sedimentary infill and geological evolution of the Çameli Basin, Denizli, SW Turkey;Alçiçek;Bulletin of Mineral Research and Exploration of Turkey,2004

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