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The Alboran domain in the western Mediterranean evolution: the birth of a concept
36
Citations
85
References
2015
Year
Historical GeographyEngineeringContinental TectonicsTectonic EvolutionArchaeologyWestern MediterraneanWestern Mediterranean EvolutionEarth ScienceCentral MediterraneanContinental MarginArchaeological RecordHistorical LinguisticsMiddle Eastern StudiesPrehistoryCultural HistoryLanguage StudiesMediterranean ArchaeologyMesozoic TectonicsClassicsNorth AfricaHistorical ArchaeologyAlboran DomainGeographyGeologyTectonicsEconomic GeologyOrogeny
Abstract Since the early 70’s the majority of tectonic reconstructions of the western Mediterranean employ the Alboran domain notion as a migrating microcontinent or landmass mainly composed of Paleozoic-Triassic rocks affected by ‘Alpine’ HP-LT metamorphism. For nearly three decades, since the mid-80’s, the Alboran domain was considered as a fragment of the Alpine chain that moved westward, colliding into Iberia and North Africa to produce the Gibraltar arc and Betic-Rif chain. In 2012, a new hypothesis for the evolution of the western Mediterranean was presented in which the Betic-Rif orogenic chain originates from rollback of an initially SE-dipping subduction of the westernmost segments of the Ligurian-Tethys under the Africa margin. This interpretation considers the metamorphic ‘Alboran domain’ rocks as crustal successions of the hyper-extended African and Iberian continental margins, which have undergone a complete subduction-exhumation cycle above a NW- to W-retreating subduction. A key outcome of this hypothesis is that the Alboran domain is not a fragment of the Alpine chain but a consequence of rollback dynamics. In this contribution we try to elucidate the historical reasons behind the classical ‘Alpine’ interpretation of the Betic-Rif, by briefly describing key contributions, which appear linked in a logical sequence that traces the evolution of the Alboran domain concept since its original formulation by Andrieux and coauthors in 1971.
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