TY - JOUR
T1 - Oligocene/Early Miocene E/W-Shortening in the Oman Mountains Related to Oblique Arabia-India Convergence
AU - Scharf, Andreas
AU - Mattern, Frank
AU - Bolhar, Robert
AU - Callegari, Ivan
AU - Mattern, Paul
AU - Ring, Uwe
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - Field survey, literature review, geological map interpretation, GPlates reconstruction and LA-ICP-MS U-Pb dating of synkinematic calcite demonstrate that ∼E/W-shortening in eastern Oman was significant and related to oblique convergence of Arabia and India from 32.5 to 20 Ma. Approximately N/S-striking contractional structures, WNW to NNW-striking sinistral faults and ∼E/W-striking normal faults characterize a ∼250 km × ∼50 km wrench corridor in the eastern Oman Mountains (Hajar Wrench Corridor, HWC). Numerous faults/folds indicate that deformation of the HWC is widely distributed but concentrated along WNW to NNW-striking major faults at the SW margin of the Saih Hatat Dome, forming the Hajar Shear Zone, which reactivated basement faults. GPlates reconstructions reveal that N-drifting India rotated 8° counter-clockwise with respect to fixed Arabia from 32.5 to 20 Ma, leading to a minimum of 100 km E/W convergence between both plates. This convergence created the sinistral HWC with a displacement of a few to several tens of kilometers. Independently from the GPlates time constraints, two U-Pb ages of synkinematic calcites, crystallized along faults during HWC movement, yield compatible ages of 30.08 ± 0.47 and 22.31 ± 2.15 Ma (2 standard error). E/W-shortening also affected the northern Oman Mountains, creating the ∼N/S-striking Hagab Thrust in the Musandam Peninsula and the Jabal Hafit Anticline.
AB - Field survey, literature review, geological map interpretation, GPlates reconstruction and LA-ICP-MS U-Pb dating of synkinematic calcite demonstrate that ∼E/W-shortening in eastern Oman was significant and related to oblique convergence of Arabia and India from 32.5 to 20 Ma. Approximately N/S-striking contractional structures, WNW to NNW-striking sinistral faults and ∼E/W-striking normal faults characterize a ∼250 km × ∼50 km wrench corridor in the eastern Oman Mountains (Hajar Wrench Corridor, HWC). Numerous faults/folds indicate that deformation of the HWC is widely distributed but concentrated along WNW to NNW-striking major faults at the SW margin of the Saih Hatat Dome, forming the Hajar Shear Zone, which reactivated basement faults. GPlates reconstructions reveal that N-drifting India rotated 8° counter-clockwise with respect to fixed Arabia from 32.5 to 20 Ma, leading to a minimum of 100 km E/W convergence between both plates. This convergence created the sinistral HWC with a displacement of a few to several tens of kilometers. Independently from the GPlates time constraints, two U-Pb ages of synkinematic calcites, crystallized along faults during HWC movement, yield compatible ages of 30.08 ± 0.47 and 22.31 ± 2.15 Ma (2 standard error). E/W-shortening also affected the northern Oman Mountains, creating the ∼N/S-striking Hagab Thrust in the Musandam Peninsula and the Jabal Hafit Anticline.
KW - Arabian plate
KW - GPlates reconstruction
KW - strike-slip tectonics
KW - U-Pb geochronology on calcite
KW - wrench-fault assemblage
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U2 - 10.1029/2022TC007271
DO - 10.1029/2022TC007271
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85145193886
SN - 0278-7407
VL - 41
JO - Tectonics
JF - Tectonics
IS - 12
M1 - e2022TC007271
ER -