Maria Elena Spano
University of Cagliari
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Featured researches published by Maria Elena Spano.
International Journal of Earth Sciences | 2013
Gabriele Cruciani; Marcello Franceschelli; Giovanni Musumeci; Maria Elena Spano; Massimo Tiepolo
In the external units of the Sardinian Variscides Nappe Zone, volcanic and volcanoclastic successions of Middle Ordovician age follow Lower Paleozoic calc-alkaline magmatism developed at the northern Gondwana margin. We present geochemical and zircon U–Pb isotopic data for the Truzzulla Formation, a low-to-medium-grade metamorphic volcanic–volcanoclastic succession belonging to the Monte Grighini Unit, the deepest unit in the Nappe Zone. Geochemical and radiometric data allow us to define a Late Ordovician (Katian) magmatic (volcanic) event of calc-alkaline affinity. These new data, in conjunction with previously published data, indicate that in the Sardinian Variscides, the age of Lower Paleozoic Andean-type calc-alkaline magmatism spans from Middle to Late Ordovician. Moreover, the age distribution of calc-alkaline volcanics and volcanoclastic rocks in the Nappe Zone is consistent with a diachronous development of Middle–Late Ordovician Andean-type magmatic arc through the portion of the northern Gondwanian margin now represented by the Sardinian Variscides. This reconstruction of the Sardinian Variscides reflects the complex magmatic and tectonic evolution of the northern margin of Gondwana in the Lower Paleozoic.
Journal of Maps | 2015
Giovanni Musumeci; Maria Elena Spano; Gian Piero Cherchi; Marcello Franceschelli; Pier Carlo Pertusati; Gabriele Cruciani
The study area, belongs to the Nappe zone of the Sardinian Variscan chain at the NW termination of the Flumendosa antiform. The Monte Grighini Complex is a NW-SE trending metamorphic complex made up of three tectonic units and synkinematic magmatic intrusions that show a section of the deepest portion of the Nappe zone. The tectonic units stacked and folded under lower greenschist and upper amphibolite facies conditions, were finally juxtaposed by a kilometer-wide NW-SE trending dextral transtensive shear zone during the Late Variscan tectonics. The 1:25,000 scale geological map, cross sections and shear zone deformation map illustrate the tectonic and metamorphic setting of the area, resulting from the polyphasic Variscan collisional evolution including early nappe stacking and later strike slip and extensional tectonics coeval with a late Carboniferous magmatism. Deformation structures and metamorphic assemblages recorded by the tectonic units as well as synkinematic intrusions, provide constraints of fundamental importance for the reconstruction of southern Variscan chain tectono-metamorphic history.
The Future of the Italian Geosciences - The Italian Geosciences of the Future. 87° Congresso della Società Geologica Italiana e 90° Congresso della Società Italiana di Mineralogia e Petrologia | 2014
Luca Giacomo Costamagna; Gabriele Cruciani; Franco Marco Elter; Dario Fancello; Marcello Franceschelli; F. Massa; Maria Elena Spano
Lucchi, Renata G. ... et. al.-- 87° Congresso della Societa Geologica Italiana e 90° Congresso della Societa Italiana di Mineralogia e Petrologia, The Future of the Italian Geosciences - The Italian Geosciences of the Future, 10-12 September 2014, Milan, Italy.-- 1 pageThe Montellina Spring (370 m a.s.l.) represents an example of groundwater resource in mountain region. It is a significant source of drinking water located in the right side of the Dora Baltea Valley (Northwestern Italy), SW of Quincinetto town. This spring shows a morphological location along a ridge, 400 m from the Renanchio Torrent in the lower sector of the slope. The spring was investigated using various methodologies as geological survey, supported by photo interpretation, structural reconstruction, NaCl and fluorescent tracer tests, discharge measurements. This multidisciplinary approach, necessary due to the complex geological setting, is required for the importance of the Montellina Spring. It is interesting in the hydrogeological context of Western Alps for its high discharge, relatively constant over time (average 150 l/s), and for its location outside a fluvial incision and suspended about 40 m above the Dora Baltea valley floor (Lasagna et al. 2013). According to the geological setting, the hydrogeological reconstruction of the area suggests that the large amount of groundwater in the basin is essentially favoured by a highly fractured bedrock, covered by wide and thick bodies of glacial and gravitational sediments. The emergence of the water along the slope, in the Montellina Spring, is essentially due to a change of permeability between the deep bedrock and the shallow bedrock and/or surficial sediments. The deep bedrock, showing closed fractures and/or fractures filled by glacial deposits, is slightly permeable. The shallow bedrock, strongly loosened as result of gravitational phenomena, and the local gravitational sediments are, on the contrary, highly permeable. The concentration of water at the spring is due to several reasons. a) The spring is immediately downward a detachment niche, dipping towards the spring, that essentially drains the water connected to the change of permeability in the bedrock. b) It is along an important fracture, that carries a part of the losses of the Renanchio Torrent. c) Finally, it is favored by the visible and buried morphology. Although it is located along a ridge, the spring occurs in a small depression between a moraine and a landslide body. It also can be favored by the likely concave trend of buried base of the landslide. At last, tracer tests of the Renanchio Torrent water with fluorescent tracer are performed, with a continuous monitoring in the Montellina Spring. The surveys permit to verify and quantify the spring and torrent hydrogeological relationship, suggesting that only a small fraction of stream losses feeds the spring.
Journal of Metamorphic Geology | 2012
Gabriele Cruciani; Marcello Franceschelli; Chiara Groppo; Maria Elena Spano
International Journal of Earth Sciences | 2015
Gabriele Cruciani; Marcello Franceschelli; Chiara Groppo; Giacomo Oggiano; Maria Elena Spano
Periodico Di Mineralogia | 2014
Gabriele Cruciani; Dario Fancello; Marcello Franceschelli; Massimo Scodina; Maria Elena Spano
Length scales, times scales and relative contribution of Variscan orogenic events to formation of European crust | 2012
Maria Elena Spano; Gabriele Cruciani; Marcello Franceschelli; H.-J. Massonne; Giovanni Musumeci
Journal of Metamorphic Geology | 2016
Gabriele Cruciani; Marcello Franceschelli; H.-J. Massonne; Giovanni Musumeci; Maria Elena Spano
Variscan 2012. Length scales, time scales and relative contribution of Variscan orogenic events to formation of European crust. Special meeting of French and Italian Geological Societies | 2012
Gabriele Cruciani; Marcello Franceschelli; Giovanni Musumeci; Maria Elena Spano; Massimo Tiepolo
Geoitalia 2011 - VIII Forum Italiano di Scienze della Terra | 2011
Gabriele Cruciani; Marcello Franceschelli; Chiara Groppo; Maria Elena Spano