Kamil Ustaszewski
University of Jena
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Featured researches published by Kamil Ustaszewski.
International Journal of Earth Sciences | 2015
Mark R. Handy; Kamil Ustaszewski; E. Kissling
Palinspastic map reconstructions and plate motion studies reveal that switches in subduction polarity and the opening of slab gaps beneath the Alps and Dinarides were triggered by slab tearing and involved widespread intracrustal and crust–mantle decoupling during Adria–Europe collision. In particular, the switch from south-directed European subduction to north-directed “wrong-way” Adriatic subduction beneath the Eastern Alps was preconditioned by two slab-tearing events that were continuous in Cenozoic time: (1) late Eocene to early Oligocene rupturing of the oppositely dipping European and Adriatic slabs; these ruptures nucleated along a trench–trench transfer fault connecting the Alps and Dinarides; (2) Oligocene to Miocene steepening and tearing of the remaining European slab under the Eastern Alps and western Carpathians, while subduction of European lithosphere continued beneath the Western and Central Alps. Following the first event, post-late Eocene NW motion of the Adriatic Plate with respect to Europe opened a gap along the Alps–Dinarides transfer fault which was filled with upwelling asthenosphere. The resulting thermal erosion of the lithosphere led to the present slab gap beneath the northern Dinarides. This upwelling also weakened the upper plate of the easternmost part of the Alpine orogen and induced widespread crust–mantle decoupling, thus facilitating Pannonian extension and roll-back subduction of the Carpathian oceanic embayment. The second slab-tearing event triggered uplift and peneplainization in the Eastern Alps while opening a second slab gap, still present between the Eastern and Central Alps, that was partly filled by northward counterclockwise subduction of previously unsubducted Adriatic continental lithosphere. In Miocene time, Adriatic subduction thus jumped westward from the Dinarides into the heart of the Alpine orogen, where northward indentation and wedging of Adriatic crust led to rapid exhumation and orogen-parallel escape of decoupled Eastern Alpine crust toward the Pannonian Basin. The plate reconstructions presented here suggest that Miocene subduction and indentation of Adriatic lithosphere in the Eastern Alps were driven primarily by the northward push of the African Plate and possibly enhanced by neutral buoyancy of the slab itself, which included dense lower crust of the Adriatic continental margin.
Tectonics | 2017
Eline Le Breton; Mark R. Handy; Giancarlo Molli; Kamil Ustaszewski
A new kinematic reconstruction that incorporates estimates of post-20 Ma shortening and extension in the Apennines, Alps, Dinarides, and Sicily Channel Rift Zone (SCRZ) reveals that the Adriatic microplate (Adria) rotated counterclockwise as it subducted beneath the European Plate to the west and to the east, while indenting the Alps to the north. Minimum and maximum amounts of rotation are derived by using, respectively, estimates of crustal extension along the SCRZ (minimum of 30 km) combined with crustal shortening in the Eastern Alps (minimum of 115 km) and a maximum amount (140 km) of convergence between Adria and Moesia across the southern Dinarides and Carpatho-Balkan orogens. When combined with Neogene convergence in the Western Alps, the best fit of available structural data constrains Adria to have moved 113 km to the NW (azimuth 325°) while rotating 5 ± 3° counterclockwise relative to Europe since 20 Ma. Amounts of plate convergence predicted by our new model exceed Neogene shortening estimates of several tens of kilometers in both the Apennines and Dinarides. We attribute this difference to crust-mantle decoupling (delamination) during rollback in the Apennines and to distributed deformation related to the northward motion of the Dacia Unit between the southern Dinarides and Europe (Moesia). Neogene motion of Adria resulted from a combination of Africa pushing from the south, the Adriatic-Hellenides slab pulling to the northeast, and crustal wedging in the Western Alps, which acted as a pivot and stopped farther northwestward motion of Adria relative to Europe.
Tectonophysics | 2012
Kamil Ustaszewski; Yih-Min Wu; John Suppe; Hsin-Hua Huang; Chien-Hsin Chang; Sara Carena
Tectonics | 2017
Eline Le Breton; Mark R. Handy; Giancarlo Molli; Kamil Ustaszewski
Terra Nova | 2015
Sascha Sandmann; Thorsten J. Nagel; Nikolaus Froitzheim; Kamil Ustaszewski; Carsten Münker
Tectonophysics | 2017
Payman Navabpour; Alexander Malz; Jonas Kley; Melanie Siegburg; Norbert Kasch; Kamil Ustaszewski
Journal of African Earth Sciences | 2017
Taufeeq Dhansay; Payman Navabpour; Maarten J. de Wit; Kamil Ustaszewski
Archive | 2010
J. E. Suppe; Yih-Min Wu; Sara Carena; Kamil Ustaszewski
Geomorphology | 2018
Peter Biermanns; Benjamin Schmitz; Kamil Ustaszewski; Klaus Reicherter
9th International INQUA Meeting on Paleoseismology, Active Tectonics and Archeoseismology | 2018
Peter Biermanns; Klaus Reicherter; S. Mechernich; Kamil Ustaszewski; K. Onuzi; Benjamin Schmitz