Elisa Padoa
University of Florence
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Featured researches published by Elisa Padoa.
Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2003
Emilio Saccani; Elisa Padoa; Adonis Photiades
Abstract The Middle Unit of the central-northern Argolis Peninsula, in NE Peloponnesus (Greece), is composed of several tectonic slices, locally including intact sequences of mafic volcanic rocks topped by radiolarian cherts. Although some of these sequences are Jurassic in age, many of them display a Triassic age based on biostratigraphical evidence. The petrological studies presented in this paper indicate that the Triassic volcanic rocks were generated in a mid-ocean ridge setting, and that they represent the oldest remnants of the Pindos oceanic crust so far recognized in the Subpelagonian zone. On the basis of immobile trace element analyses, two chemically distinct groups of Triassic lavas can be recognized in the various volcanic sequences. One group is represented by transitional-type mid-ocean ridge basalts (T-MORBs) displaying moderate light rare earth element (LREE) enrichment, and incompatible element abundances very similar to those observed in present-day T-MORBs. The other group exhibits a range of characteristics typical of many normal-type MORBs: that is, variable LREE depletion and flat N-MORB normalized patterns of incompatible element abundance. Moreover, many geochemical characteristics indicate that the various N-MORB type volcanic sequences originated from chemically distinct (heterogeneous) sub-oceanic mantle sources. Analogous to similar basalts from ophiolitic mélanges of the Dinaride-Hellenide belt, the T-MORBs from the Argolis Middle Unit are interpreted as having originated from a primitive mantle source variably enriched by an ocean-island basalt (OIB)-type component. In contrast, the contemporaneous occurrence of N-MORBs implies that, during the Mid-Late Triassic, oceanic spreading of the Pindos basin had already reached, at least in some sectors, a quasi-steady state involving only sub-oceanic mantle sources and their partial melt derivatives. Our model for the Triassic opening of the Pindos oceanic basin and its related tectonomagmatic evolution is largely supported by comparison with the Red Sea embryonic ocean, a modern analogous setting.
Comptes Rendus De L Academie Des Sciences Serie Ii Fascicule A-sciences De La Terre Et Des Planetes | 2001
Elisa Padoa; Michel Durand-Delga
Abstract The Rio Magno unit (eastern Corsica) is represented by an Apenninic-type (Internal Ligurides) ophiolitic sequence: N-MORB basalts, Lower Cretaceous Palombini-bearing limestones, Middle Cretaceous flysch. In addition, it is unaffected by HP–LT alpine metamorphism. These peculiar features further support the hypothesis of close geodynamical relationships between the Corsican and Northern Apenninic ophiolites. We suggest that, in the Jurassic Piedmont-Ligurian oceanic basin, the Rio Magno and Internal Ligurides ophiolitic sequences represent a continuous, internal, oceanic palaeodomain. Afterwards, during Late Cretaceous–Late Eocene, they underwent a similar orogenic evolution, escaping from deep involvement during the subduction beneath the European continental margin.
Ofioliti | 2003
Emilio Saccani; Adonis Photiades; Elisa Padoa
Ofioliti | 2000
Emilio Saccani; Elisa Padoa; Renzo Tassinari
Terra Nova | 2001
Elisa Padoa; Emilio Saccani; Michel Durand-Delga
Ofioliti | 2002
Giuseppe Giunta; Luigi Beccaluva; Massimo Coltorti; Daniela Cutrupia; Carlos Dengo; George E. Harlow; Byron Mota; Elisa Padoa; Joshua Rosenfeld; Franca Siena
International Geological Congress | 2003
Giuseppe Giunta; Michele Marroni; Elisa Padoa; Luca Pandolfi
Ofioliti | 2002
Elisa Padoa; Emilio Saccani; Michel Durand-Delga
Ofioliti | 2002
Emilio Saccani; Elisa Padoa; Adonis Photiades
Ofioliti | 2001
Alessandro Ellero; Michele Marroni; Elisa Padoa; Luca Pandolfi; Franco Urbani