• Title of article

    Reply to Genç and Yürür’s comments on: “Late Cretaceous extensional denudation along a marble detachment fault zone in the Kırşehir massif near Kaman, Central Turkey”

  • Author/Authors

    Lefebvre، نويسنده , , Côme and Barnhoorn، نويسنده , , Auke and van Hinsbergen، نويسنده , , Douwe J.J. and Kaymakci، نويسنده , , Nuretdin and Vissers، نويسنده , , Reinoud L.M. and Newman، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    4
  • From page
    90
  • To page
    93
  • Abstract
    The emplacement of calcite-filled veins perpendicular to the Dead Sea Fault Zone in northern Israel reflects strain partitioning during transpression. We present structural, geochemical, and U–Th geochronological data that constrain the mechanism, conditions and timing of vein formation. Vein walls are strongly brecciated and commonly cemented with coarsely crystalline calcite, whereas calcite-filled veins are composed of wall-parallel bands of calcite crystals. Elongated blocky and fibrous calcite crystals grew perpendicular to the vein walls and are characterised by a truncate sealing-hiatus morphology, indicating episodes of partial or complete sealing of the fractures during calcite precipitation. Stable isotope and rare-earth element and yttrium (REY) analyses indicate that calcite-filled veins precipitated by karst processes, involving meteoric water and limited fluid-rock interactions. U–Th dating results show a prolonged history of vein growth. While some veins initiated prior to 500 ka, the majority of the veins were active between 358 and 17 ka. Age constraints on vein activity correspond to an ∼E–W regional shortening phase in this sector of the Dead Sea Fault Zone, associated with an increased component of convergence during the late-Pleistocene.
  • Keywords
    Central Anatolia , Tectonic evolution , Kaman Fault
  • Journal title
    Journal of Structural Geology
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Journal of Structural Geology
  • Record number

    2227427