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Featured researches published by Marco Chiari.


International Journal of Earth Sciences | 2013

Geodynamic evolution of ophiolites from Albania and Greece (Dinaric-Hellenic belt): one, two, or more oceanic basins?

Valerio Bortolotti; Marco Chiari; Michele Marroni; Luca Pandolfi; Gianfranco Principi; Emilio Saccani

All the geological constraints for an exhaustive reconstruction of the Triassic to Tertiary tectonic history of the southern Dinaric-Hellenic belt can be found in Albania and Greece. This article aims to schematically reconstruct this long tectonic evolution primarily based on a detailed analysis of the tectonic setting, the stratigraphy, the geochemistry, and the age of the ophiolites. In contrast to what was previously reported in the literature, we propose a new subdivision on a regional scale of the ophiolite complexes cropping out in Albania and Greece. This new subdivision includes six types of ophiolite occurrences, each corresponding to different tectonic units derived from a single obducted sheet. These units are represented by: (1) sub-ophiolite mélange, (2) Triassic ocean-floor ophiolites, (3) metamorphic soles, (4) Jurassic fore-arc ophiolites, (5) Jurassic intra-oceanic-arc ophiolites, and (6) Jurassic back-arc basin ophiolites. The overall features of these ophiolites are coherent with the existence of a single, though composite, oceanic basin located east of the Adria/Pelagonian continental margin. This oceanic basin was originated during the Middle Triassic and was subsequently (Early Jurassic) affected by an east-dipping intra-oceanic subduction. This subduction was responsible for the birth of intra-oceanic-arc and back-arc oceanic basins separated by a continental volcanic arc during the Early to Middle Jurassic. From the uppermost Middle Jurassic to the Early Cretaceous, an obduction developed, during which the ophiolites were thrust westwards firstly onto the neighboring oceanic lithosphere and then onto the Adria margin.


Facies | 2013

Late Triassic, Early and Middle Jurassic Radiolaria from ferromanganese-chert ‘nodules’ (Angelokastron, Argolis, Greece): evidence for prolonged radiolarite sedimentation in the Maliac-Vardar Ocean

Marco Chiari; Peter O. Baumgartner; Daniel Bernoulli; Valerio Bortolotti; Marta Marcucci; Adonis Photiades; Gianfranco Principi

In the Argolis, the Basal Sequence, constituting the eastern Pelagonian margin which bordered the Maliac-Vardar oceanic domain, includes shallow-water carbonates of Late Triassic-Early Jurassic, condensed pelagic limestones of Early-Middle Jurassic, radiolarian cherts of late Middle-Late Jurassic age and siliceous mudstones and sandstones rich in ophiolite fragments. Up-section, coarse breccias, including clasts of boninites derived from the ophiolite obducted onto the Pelagonian margin in Late Jurassic times crop out. Near Angelokastron a small quarry exposes pervasively sheared dark reddish-brown, radiolarian-bearing cherty shales with disrupted fragments of chert and chert nodules impregnated by ferro-manganese oxides. These shales occur in the footwall of a thrust bringing them into contact with the Pantokrator Limestone of the Basal Sequence. We collected more than 30 samples of the chert fragments and the shaly matrix. Thirteen nodules and one matrix sample yielded determinable radiolarians. Low to non-detectable concentrations of trace metals such as Co, Cr, Cu, Ni, Zn, and Pb indicate a hydrothermal origin of the ferro-manganese mineralization. The radiolarian taxa found indicate four age groups for the nodules that are embedded in the siliceous shale matrix that yielded a Middle Jurassic age (middle Bathonian). The first group includes a nodule of Late Triassic age (late Norian to Rhaetian); the second group nodules of Early Jurassic age (late early to late Pliensbachian and probably middle-late Toarcian); the third group nodules of early Middle Jurassic age (Aalenian–Bajocian); the last group finally includes nodules of late Middle Jurassic age (Bajocian–Bathonian). The presence of Upper Triassic to Middle Jurassic Mn-impregnated chert nodules in a Middle Jurassic matrix indicates a deep oceanic environment of deposition outside the Pelagonian realm (easternmost Adria Plate), which at that time was a shallow-water carbonate platform with a thin pelagic limestone cover. The chert nodules are with all certainty derived from the oceanic Maliac-Vardar domain and were, together with their host formation, tectonically emplaced onto the Pelagonian margin. We speculate that these nodules, more lithified than their matrix, were exhumed on the slope of an intra-oceanic accretionary wedge and were redeposited in the Middle Jurassic siliceous mudstones on the floor of the subducting Maliac-Vardar Ocean.


Geological Magazine | 2018

The Jurassic–Early Cretaceous basalt–chert association in the ophiolites of the Ankara Mélange, east of Ankara, Turkey: age and geochemistry

Valerio Bortolotti; Marco Chiari; M. Cemal Göncüoglu; Gianfranco Principi; Emilio Saccani; U. Kagan Tekin; Renzo Tassinari

This study is focused on slide blocks including oceanic lavas associated with pelagic sediments within the eastern part of the Ankara Melange. A detailed petrological characterization of the volcanic rocks and a detailed biochronological investigation of the associated radiolarian cherts in eight sections (east of Ankara) was carried out. The volcanic rocks are largely represented by basalts and minor ferrobasalts and trachytes. They show different geochemical affinities and overlapping ages including: (a) Late Jurassic – Early Cretaceous garnet-influenced MORB (middle late Oxfordian to late Kimmeridgian–early Tithonian and early–early late Tithonian; late Valanginian–early Barremian); (b) Early Cretaceous enriched-MORB (middle late Barremian–early early Aptian; Valanginian to middle Aptian–early Albian); (c) Middle Jurassic plume-type MORB (early–middle Bajocian to late Bathonian–early Callovian); (d) Late Jurassic – Early Cretaceous alkaline basalts (middle–late Oxfordian to late Kimmeridgian–early Tithonian; late Valanginian to late Hauterivian). All rock types show a clear garnet signature, as testified to by their high MREE/HREE (middle rare earth element/heavy rare earth element) ratios. The coexistence of chemically different rock types from Middle Jurassic to Early Cretaceous times suggests that they were formed in a mid-ocean ridge setting from partial melting of a highly heterogeneous mantle characterized by the extensive occurrence of OIB-metasomatized portions, which were likely inherited from Triassic mantle plume activity associated with the continental rift and opening of the Neotethys branch.


Geological Magazine | 2018

From obduction to continental collision: New data from Central Greece

Giuseppe Nirta; Giovanna Moratti; Luigi Piccardi; Domenico Montanari; Nicolaos Carras; Rita Catanzariti; Marco Chiari; Marta Marcucci

The aim of this paper is to contribute to deciphering the evolutionary history of the Hellenides by the study of a large sector of the chain located between the front of the ophiolitic units and the external zones classically attributed to the continental margin of Adria. In particular, the tectonic units located in Boeotia – a key area located in Central Greece at the boundary between the Internal and External Hellenides – were studied from structural, stratigraphic and biostratigraphic points of view. Addressing the main debated aspects concerning the origin of the ophiolite nappe(s), the tectonic evolution of the Hellenic orogen was revised with a particular emphasis on the period between obduction and continental collision. New findings were compared with consolidated data concerning the main metamorphic events recorded in the more Internal Hellenides, geochemistry and age of the ophiolites and main stratigraphic constraints obtained in other sectors of the belt. Finally, a new reconstruction of the tectonic evolution of this area was introduced and, in the context of the dispute concerning the origin of the ‘ophiolitic belts’ as a possible record of multiple oceanic basins, we put forward for consideration a ‘single ocean’ tectonic model spanning from Triassic up to Tertiary times, and valid for the whole Hellenic–Albanian sector.


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2004

High-resolution geochemical and biotic records of the Tethyan `Bonarelli Level¿ (OAE2, latest Cenomanian) from the Calabianca¿Guidaloca composite section, northwestern Sicily, Italy

Giovanna Scopelliti; Adriana Bellanca; Rodolfo Coccioni; Valeria Luciani; Rodolfo Neri; François Baudin; Marco Chiari; Marta Marcucci


Ofioliti | 2004

Comparison among the Albanian and Greek ophiolites: in search of constraints for the evolution of the Mesozoic Tethys ocean

Valerio Bortolotti; Marco Chiari; Marta Marcucci; Michele Marroni; Luca Pandolfi; Gianfranco Principi; Emilio Saccani


Cretaceous Research | 1998

Integrated stratigraphic, palaeontological, and geochemical analysis of the uppermost Hauterivian Faraoni Level in the Fiume Bosso section, Umbria-Marche Apennines, Italy

Rodolfo Coccioni; François Baudin; Fabrizio Cecca; Marco Chiari; Simone Galeotti; Silvia Gardin; Giovanni Salvini


Ofioliti | 2004

THE PRE-OROGENIC VOLCANO-SEDIMENTARY COVERS OF THE WESTERN TETHYS OCEANIC BASIN: A REVIEW

Gianfranco Principi; Valerio Bortolotti; Marco Chiari; Luciano Cortesogno; Laura Gaggero; Marta Marcucci; Emilio Saccani; Benedetta Treves


Ofioliti | 2008

NEW GEOCHEMICAL AND AGE DATA ON THE OPHIOLITES FROM THE OTHRYS AREA (GREECE): IMPLICATION FOR THE TRIASSIC EVOLUTION OF THE VARDAR OCEAN

Valerio Bortolotti; Marco Chiari; Marta Marcucci; Adonis Photiades; Gianfranco Principi; Emilio Saccani


Ofioliti | 2006

TRIASSIC MORB MAGMATISM IN THE SOUTHERN MIRDITA ZONE (ALBANIA)

Valerio Bortolotti; Marco Chiari; A. Kodra; Marta Marcucci; Michele Marroni; F. Mustafa; Mensi Prela; Luca Pandolfi; Gianfranco Principi; Emilio Saccani

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