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10th Topo-Europe workshop 2014 Interplay between surface, lithospheric and mantle processes ABSTRACTS Tectonic control on topographic and exhumational segmentation of the Himalaya Peter van der Beek(1) Mallory Baudin(1) Camille Litty(1,2) Jonathan Mercier(1) Xavier Robert(1) Elisabeth Hardwick(1) (1)Institut des Sciences de la Terre, Université Joseph Fourier, Grenoble, France (2)Now at: Institut für Geologie, Universität Bern, Switzerland" Abstract: Although the Himalayan range is commonly presented as cylindrical along-strike, geological structures, topography, precipitation, and exhumation rates as recorded by low-temperature thermochronology data all vary significantly from west to east. In particular, segments of the belt that are characterized by a clear topographic step between the Lesser and Higher Himalaya, associated with a peak in precipitation and focused exhumation (e.g. central Nepal, Himachal Pradesh) alternate with segments where the topography increases more linearly to the north, precipitation peaks at lower elevations and exhumation rates appear to be lower (e.g. western Nepal, Bhutan). The potential climatic or tectonic controls on these spatially variable topographic, precipitation and exhumational patterns have been widely discussed in recent years but remain unclear. Thermo-kinematic modelling predicts that the geometry of the main Himalayan detachment (in particular the presence or absence of a major mid-crustal ramp) strongly controls the kinematics, exhumation and topography of the orogen. Where a major crustal ramp is present, the topography shows a steep gradient that focuses exhumation and orographic precipitation whereas the topography is gentler and exhumation less focused in the absence of a ramp. We test this prediction by comparing the pattern of topography, river incision and long-term exhumation in central Nepal with new results from the remote Karnali River transect in far western Nepal. Our results therefore imply that along-strike climatic variations in the Himalaya respond to tectonics rather than driving it. The presence or absence of a mid-crustal ramp may be due to inherited structures on the underthrusting Indian Plate or, alternatively, may reflect transient behaviour of the accreting Lesser Himalayan thrust stack, which may oscillate between frontal accretion (without a ramp) or basal accretion in the presence of a ramp. GEOCHEMISTRY OF ADIGRAT SANDSTONE, NORTH WESTERN ETHIOPIA Barsisa Bekele Wollaga University Abstract: Mineralogy, major, traces, and rare earth elements geochemistry of Adigrat Sandstones Formation from the Blue Nile Basin (BNB), NW Ethiopian plateau have been analyzed to decipher their provenance composition, paleoweathering and paleoclimatic scenarios. Samples of this sandstone are slightly variable in composition. Mineralogically the framework grains are quartz (Q), feldspar (F) and lithic fragments (L) and on QFL diagram; most of the samples are plotted in subarkose and lithic subarkose fields. Geochemically, Adigrat sandstones are classified as arkose, subarkose, litharenite, and sublitharenite. The CIA, PIA and CIW values for this sandstone and the A–CN–K diagram agreeably suggest that source rocks experienced intense chemical weathering under hot and humid tropical to sub-tropical climate. Mineralogical evidence suggests that plutonic and metamorphic rocks were major contributing source rocks. Perhaps, multi-cyclic processes reworked the sediment. Relatively immobile elements have been selected for provenance studies. Ratios and plots of relatively immobile elements consistently suggest that the Adigrat Sandstone is derived from compositionally mixed source between mafic and intermediate igneous rocks. Discriminant function diagram constructed from major oxides, the Chondrite normalized REE plot, Cr/V vs. Y/Ni ratios, La vs. Th plot and Th-Hf-Co ternary diagram all suggest that the Adigrat Sandstone is derived from compositionally mixed source. Significant contributions of intermediate supply are also confirmed by Al2O3/TiO2 ratios and lower Eu/Eu* (0.552) values than that of PAAS (0.65). Provenance composition and degree of sorting between Adigrat Sandstone in BNB vs. Mekele Basin (MB) have been compared. The result shows that sediment of the former were highly sorted and compositionally derived from mafic and intermediate input, where as that of the later was mainly derived from felsic rocks. Keywords: Adigrat sandstones, provenance, paleoweathering, paleoclimate and Discriminant function diagram. On the use of Luminescence Geochronology to infer uplift and climatic controls on fluvial incision dynamics, terraces formation and sediment transport in rivers. Stéphane Bonnet (1) Tony Reimann (2) Dimitri Lague(3) Jakob Wallinga(2) Philippe Davy(3) Uwe Rieser (4) (1) Université de Toulouse, Géosciences Environnement Toulouse, UMR 5563, France (2) Netherlands Center for Luminescence Dating, Wageningen University of Technology, The Netherlands (3) Geoscience Rennes, CNRS/INSU, UMR 6118, Campus de Beaulieu, 35042 Rennes Cedex, France (4) Luminescence Dating Laboratory, School of Earth Sciences, Victoria University, Wellington, New Zealand "Poster” Abstract: "Luminescence Geochronology (OSL, IRSL) allows to date the burial of sediment particles within fluvial deposits on the basis of the estimate of the number of electrons trapped at defects in the crystal lattice in response to natural ionizing radiations. A prerequisite for accurate dating is that all traps were emptied by exposure to sunlight (a phenomenon referred to as bleaching) prior to deposition,. Sunlight exposure is very efficient to bleach the luminescence signal, however incomplete bleaching is ordinary in fluvial settings resulting in overestimation of ages of deposits. Here we investigate the temporal variability in luminescence single-grain ages distribution and resulting ages overestimation of sediments of a river during its downcutting into the bedrock during the Holocene (Rangitikei river, New Zealand). The results we will present will illustrate (1) a sharp decrease in fluvial incision rate during the Holocene, that we relate to the process of re-equilibration between incision and uplift following a LGM climatic inhibition of incision, (2) a fluvial incision control on the formation of fluvial terraces, high incision rates preventing lateral planation and the formation of fluvial terraces, (3) a control of fluvial incision on single-grain ages distribution and resulting ages overestimation, related to two complementary processes : attenuation of light in the water column during fast incision rate periods because of high sediment concentration and turbidity, coupled to short particle transport and bleaching because of limited cycles of erosion, transport and deposition when incision rate is high. Our results will then illustrate the richness of luminescence geochronology to investigate geomorphic processes. Strain localization in continental compressional settings: insights from analogue models Elisa Calignano (1) Dimitrios Sokoutis (1, 2) Ernst Willingshofer (1) Frédéric Gueydan (3) Sierd Cloetingh (1) (1) Faculty of Geosciences, Department of Earth Sciences, Utrecht University, Budapestlaan 4, PO Box 80021, 3508 TA Utrecht, The Netherlands (2) Department of Geosciences, University of Oslo, PO Box 1047 Blindern, N-0316 Oslo, Norway (3) Géosciences Montpellier, Université Montpellier 2, UMR CNRS/INSU 5243, Place Bataillon, CC60, 34093 Montpellier Cedex, France Abstract: The strength of the continental lithosphere is controlled by its depth dependent rheological structure. Continents, however, are the result of the assemblage of domains that suffered different tectonic processes. These result in lateral changes in composition and thermal perturbations that alter the rheology and thus the strength of the lithosphere. Numerous modelling studies investigated the localization of deformation in compressional settings in case of lithospheric weak zones flanked by stronger domains. We used lithospheric scale analogue models to explore strain redistribution and topography development resulting from the presence of stronger domains in the lithosphere. Such lateral heterogeneities have been implemented in both weak (crème-brûlée) or strong (jelly sandwich) lithosphere. Among the investigated parameters, the vertical location of a high viscosity block was varied and different convergence velocity and thickness of the upper brittle mantle were tested, both playing an important role in the crust-mantle coupling. Furthermore, we examined different orientations of the rheological boundaries with respect to the convergence direction, since reactivated lithosphere heterogeneities are often observed to strike oblique with respect to the main horizontal stress field. Experimental results indicate that the presence of strong segments within the lithosphere induce strong localization of deformation at the rheological boundaries, with associated high relief build-up. Topography allow for inferring the presence of lateral strength heterogeneities in the lithosphere with low relief being characteristic for stable regions associated with the strong domains. The obliquity of the heterogeneity with respect to convergence direction yielded to be an important factor controlling the polarity of lithospheric mantle underthrusting. The presented results provide valuable insight for strain localization in collisional settings under various rheological configurations. Strain localization during compression of a laterally heterogeneous lithosphere Elisa Calignano (1) Dimitrios Sokoutis (1, 2) Ernst Willingshofer (1) Frédéric Gueydan (3) Sierd Cloetingh (1) (1) Faculty of Geosciences, Department of Earth Sciences, Utrecht University, Budapestlaan 4, PO Box 80021, 3508 TA Utrecht, The Netherlands (2) Department of Geosciences, University of Oslo, PO Box 1047 Blindern, N-0316 Oslo, Norway (3) Géosciences Montpellier, Université Montpellier 2, UMR CNRS/INSU 5243, Place Bataillon, CC60, 34093 Montpellier Cedex, France “Poster” Abstract: First order large scale stress fields, associated with active plate tectonic processes, interact with lateral heterogeneities in the lithosphere and generate strain redistribution. Next to the fact that the strength of the continental lithosphere is mainly controlled by its depth dependent rheological structure, continents are often the product of the assemblage of domains that suffered different tectonic processes, resulting in lateral changes in composition and thermal structure. We present a series of lithospheric-scale analogue models designed to investigate strain redistribution resulting from the presence of a stronger rheological heterogeneity embedded in a weak lithosphere. The modelled lithosphere consists of a four-layer brittle-ductile rheological structure, representative of low geothermal gradient conditions. The experiments consist of three domains with different mechanical properties: two external blocks sharing the same lithospheric stratification and one narrow central block where a thicker upper crust has been implemented to approximate an increase in bulk lithospheric strength. Among the investigated parameters, convergence velocity and thickness of the upper brittle mantle are varied, both playing an important role in the crust-mantle coupling. Furthermore, we examined different orientations of the rheological boundaries with respect to the convergence direction, since reactivated lithosphere heterogeneities are often observed to strike oblique with respect to the main horizontal stress field. Experimental outcomes indicate that the presence of a strong lithospheric section induces strong localization of deformation at the rheological boundaries, with associated high relief build-up. When the strong domain was oblique to the convergence direction, deformation was partially localized along the rheological boundaries, due to the along-strike increase in distance from the moving wall. As a consequence two main thrust systems with opposite underthrusting polarity developed, connected by a complex transition zone. The presented results provide valuable insight for strain localization in collisional settings under various rheological configurations. Structural and stratigraphic 4D evolution of the Kuh-e-Faghan fault system: the intraplate response to Arabia-Eurasia collision in Central Iran Gabriele Calzolari (1) Federico Rossetti (1) Valerio Olivetti (2) Marta Della Seta (3) Reza Nozaem (4) Gianluca Vignaroli (1) Maria Laura Balestrieri (5) Domenico Cosentino (1) Claudio Faccenna (1) 1) Dipartimento di Scienze, Università Roma Tre, Largo S. L. Murialdo 1, 00146 Roma, Italy 2) Centre de Recherche et d’Enseignement de Géosciences de l’Environnement, Avenue Louis Philibert BP 80, 13545 Aix en Provence, France 3) Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, “Sapienza” Università di Roma, Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, 00185 Rome, Italy 4) Department of Science, Imam Khomeini International University, 34185-1416 Qazvin, Iran 5) CNR-Istituto di Geoscienze e Georisorse, Via G. La Pira 4, 50121 Firenze, Italy Abstract: Central Iran provides an ideal test site to study the morphotectonic response to initiation and propagation of intraplate faulting. A multidisciplinary approach that integrates structural and stratigraphic field investigations with geochronological (OSL) and thermochronological (U-Th)/He apatite, AHe) analyses is adopted to reconstruct the spatio-temporal evolution of the Kuh-e-Faghan Fault (KFF), in northeaster Central Iran. Structural mapping reveals that KFF defines a narrow, ca. 80 km long, deformation zone consisting of three main, broadly left stepping, E-W striking rightlateral fault strands, which cut through the Mesozoic-Paleozoic substratum and the NeogeneQuaternary sedimentary covers. The structural and depositional architecture of the Neogene deposits, together with the AHe thermochronology results indicate that the intra-fault blocks along the KFF experienced two major episodes of fault-related exhumation at ~18 Ma and ~4 Ma. The major outcomes of this study bear implications on: (i) the understanding the spatio-temporal evolution of intraplate strike-slip fault systems; and (ii) the Neogene-Quaternary kinematic and tectonic evolution of Central Iran. (i) A conceptual model of fault initiation and propagation is proposed. The fault system propagates and evolve from diffuse deformation, accomplished by distributed en-echelon shears, to localized deformation with development of mature, thoroughgoing fault strands. Fault zone localization induces widening of the damage zones inhibiting further length-ward propagation and causing trailing extensional and contractional terminations to develop. As a result, the fault systems may then propagate by renewed diffuse shear deformation in undeformed regions of the fault tip. (ii) The two fault-related exhumation episodes, at ~18 Ma and ~4 Ma, well fit with the regional early Miocene collision-enhanced uplift/exhumation and the late Miocene–early Pliocene widespread tectonic reorganization of the Turkish-Iranian plateau. Activation and kinematic evolution of the intraplate strike-slip fault systems in Central Iran during Neogene-Quaternary times may reflect states of far- and near-field stress changes at the collisional boundaries". On the static and dynamic contribution of topography F. Cammarano (1) M. Guerri (1) P.J. Tackley (2) (1) Department of Geosciences and Natural Resurces Management, University of Copenhagen, Denmark; (2) Institute of Geophysics, ETH Zurich, Switzerland Poster Abstract: A large part of current topography is due to isostatically compensated density variations within the crust and lithospheric mantle, but dynamic topography - i.e. the topography due to adjustment of surface (as for other internal boundaries) to mantle convection – is an important secondary component at a global scale. In order to separate the two components, it is fundamental to estimate: i) crustal and mantle density structure, ii) mantle viscosity distribution. We use a multidisciplinary approach involving geophysical observables and mineral physics constraints. 3-D mantle density structure is inferred from the thermal interpretation of several global seismic models assuming a depleted continental lithosphere (which accounts for petrological observations, as in Cammarano et al. 2011). We further constrain the top 150 km by including heatflow data and considering the thermal evolution of the oceanic lithosphere. The density structures are coupled with 3-D viscosity distributions obtained with various pressure and temperature viscosity laws. We use StagYY (Tackley 2008) to compute the associated dynamic topographies and free-air gravity. The crustal density distribution relies on CRUST1.0 (Laske et al. 2013), but we also test alternative distributions based on various average chemical compositions and a robust thermodynamic database (Guerri and Cammarano, in preparation). The statistical analysis of the results (with or without lateral variations in viscosity and at different spatial scales) and the comparison with the observations shows the importance of lithospheric densities to correctly determine the static component, thus improving the interpretation of the topography signal. Discrepancies between seismic models produce significant differences in the inferred lithospheric mantle densities already at spatial scales around one thousand kilometers. In addition, crustal densities are poorly constrained from available crustal models. A combined interpretation of gravity, seismic, heat-flow and petrologic data in terms of temperature and composition has the potential to improve current estimates of lithospheric density structure." Exhumation of the High Himalaya in the Mt. Everest region and India-Asia collision zone: implications for Himalayan tectonics B. Carrapa (1) P.G. DeCelles (1) D. Orme (1) P. Kapp (1) (1) Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona Abstract: The India-Asia collision zone in southern Tibet and the high Himalaya preserves a record of geodynamic and erosional processes following intercontinental collision. Apatite fission-track and zircon and apatite (U-Th)/He data from the Oligocene–Miocene Kailas Formation, within the IndiaAsia collision zone, show a synchronous cooling signal at 17 ± 1 Ma, which is younger than the ca. 26–21 Ma depositional age of the Kailas Formation, constrained by U-Pb and 40Ar/39Ar geochronology, and requires heating (burial) after ca. 21 Ma and subsequent rapid exhumation. Data from the Gangdese batholith underlying the Kailas Formation also indicate Miocene exhumation. Significant removal of material from the India-Asia collision zone was likely facilitated by efficient incision of the paleo–Indus and paleo–Yarlung Rivers in response to drainage reorganization and/or intensification of the Asian monsoon. AFT and 40Ar/39Ar ages from the Rongbuk region, north of Mt. Everest, record regional rapid cooling associated with tectonic exhumation along the South Tibetan Detachment at ca. 16 Ma. The depositional and thermal history of the Kailas Formation is consistent with rapid subsidence during a short-lived phase of early Miocene extension during southward rollback of the Indian plate, followed by uplift and exhumation driven by renewed northward underthrusting of India. The coeval exhumation signal at Mt. Everest suggests a similar mechanism for the initiation of the STD. Comparison between the north and south sides of Mt. Everest shows a bimodal exhumation history: the north side was exhumed by 16 Ma, whereas the south side is characterized by Pliocene (4-1 Ma; Streule et al., 2012) exhumation, suggesting that tectonic exhumation associated with STD was localized rather than regional. These results also suggest that exhumational bimodality (older to the north, younger to the south) may be a persistent feature of the High Himalaya. Cenozoic surface dynamics of West Africa D. Chardon (1) J.L. Grimaud (1, 2) A. Beauvais (3) D. Rouby (4) (1) IRD, CNRS, GET, Toulouse University, Toulouse, France ([email protected]) (2) St. Anthony Falls Laboratory, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA (3) IRD, CEREGE, Aix-Marseille University, Aix-en-Provence, France Abstract: We evaluate and quantify surface dynamics of West Africa by constraining its evolving regional topography, river catchment geometries, river long profiles, denudation and yields. Four erosion periods are considered since 45 Ma as recorded by dated and regionally correlated incision markers. The current river catchments of the sub region were acquired by drainage reorganization between ~ 45 and ~ 24 Ma (probably before 30 Ma), which triggered Niger delta progradation in the Earliest Oligocene. The fixed geometry of the West African drainage since then offers the opportunity to effectively link the inland morphoclimatic and epeirogenic record to offshore sedimentation. Drainages evolved preferentially by very slow (5 m/my) slope decrease or uniform incision along river segments comprised between stationary knickzones with no apparent relation to base level change. Therefore, knickzones’ height of position may not reflect the response of rivers to base level fall. Very slow incision allowed amplification of the Hoggar hot spot swell and flexural uplift of the continental margin to be recorded by river long profiles, emphasizing the potential of big rivers as gauges of dynamic topography. The subregion underwent a steady state, weathering-limited denudation regime controlled by the thickness of the lateritic regolith available for stripping. We obtain a regionally averaged volumetric erosion rate of 5 x 10-3 km3/km2/m.y. corresponding to a denudation rate of 6 m/m.y. that remained nearly constant for three time spans (45-24, 24-11 and 11-0 Ma) despite spatial variations due to epeirogenic movements. Denudation is converted into a yield of 20 +/- 6 t/km2/yr with a minimum solute component of 5 +/- 3 t/km2/yr accounting for the porosity of the regoliths being eroded, implying a contribution of 2 +/- 0.6 Gt/yr of the non-orogenic landmass to the global continental yield since the last peak greenhouse. Effect of surface processes on fold development: a numerical approach M. Collignon (1), B.J.P. Kaus (2), D.A. May (3), N. Fernandez (2) (1) Geological Institute, ETH Zurich, Switzerland (2) Institut für Geowissenschaften, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität, Mainz, Germany (3) Institute of Geophysics, ETH Zurich, Switzerland" Abstract: In order to understand the interactions between surface processes and multilayer folding systems, we here present fully coupled three-dimensional numerical simulations. The mechanical model represents a sedimentary cover with internal weak layers, detached over a much weaker basal layer representing salt or evaporites. Applying compression in one direction results in a series of three-dimensional buckle folds, of which the topographic expression consists of anticlines and synclines. This topography is modified through time by mass redistribution, which is achieved by a combination of fluvial and hillslope erosion, as well as deposition, and which can in return influence the subsequent deformation. Model results show that surface processes do not have a significant influence on folding patterns and aspect ratio of the folds. Nevertheless, erosion reduces the amount of shortening required to initiate folding and increases the exhumation rates. Increased sedimentation in the synclines contributes to this effect by amplifying the fold growth rate by gravity. The main contribution of surface processes is rather due to their ability to strongly modify the initial topography and hence the initial random noise, prior to deformation. If larger initial random noise is present, folds amplify faster, which is consistent with previous detachment folding theory. Variations in thickness of the sedimentary cover (in one or two directions) also have a significant influence on the folding pattern, resulting in linear, large aspect ratio folds. Our simulation results can be applied to folding-dominated fold- and thrust-belt systems, detached over weak basal layers, such as the Zagros Folded Belt. Physical Parameters Controlling Subduction Dynamics and Surface Topography in Self-Consistent Global Models of Mantle Convection F. Crameri (1) Carolina R. Lithgow-Bertelloni (1) Paul J. Tackley (2) (1) University College London (2) ETH Zurich “Poster” Abstract: Recent advances in numerical modelling allow global models of mantle convection to realistically reproduce the behaviour at convergent plate boundaries (Crameri et al., 2012a). This allows for a more extensive study of subduction that, in contrast to the numerous regional models, incorporates the complete framework of mantle convection. Here, we focus on different aspects of mantle convection including (i) slab dip variations, (ii) variations in radial mantle viscosity, and (iii) the presence of localised mantle upwellings and discuss their control on the dynamics of Earth-like plate tectonics. Additionally, we present the effect these parameter variations have on measurable quantities like dynamic topography and plate velocity. The models are calculated by the finite-volume code Stag-YY (e.g., Tackley 2008) using a multigrid method on a fully staggered grid. Second, the sticky-air method (Matsumoto and Tomoda 1983; Schmeling et al, 2008) is applied and thus approximates a free surface when the sticky-air parameters are chosen carefully (Crameri et al., 2012b). Overall, this study demonstrates the ability of various parameters to significantly influence both subduction dynamics and surface topography. REFERENCES Crameri, F., et al. (2012a), Geophys. Res. Lett., 39(3). Crameri, F., et al. (2012b), Geophys. J. Int., 189(1). Matsumoto, T., and Y. Tomoda (1983), J. Phys. Earth, 31(3). Schmeling, H., et al. (2008), Phys. Earth Planet. Int., 171(1-4). Tackley, P. J. (2008), Phys. Earth Planet. Int., 171(1-4)." Hinterland “Bobber” Basins as Recorders of Lithospheric Removal in the Central Andes P.G. DeCelles (1) B. Carrapa (1) H. Wang (2) C.A. Currie (2) (1) Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, USA; (2) Department of Physics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada Abstract: The hinterland (Puna and Altiplano) region of the central Andes contains numerous Miocene to Recent enigmatic sedimentary basins not attributable to thrust-loading or normal faulting. Arizaro basin in the Puna Plateau of NW Argentina is typical. At 3800-4200 m elevation along the eastern flank of the magmatic arc, the basin is circular, ~100 km in diameter, and was filled during Miocene time (ca. 21-9 Ma) by >3.5 km of eolian, alluvial, fluvial, and lacustrine sediment and ashfall tuffs from the magmatic arc. The basin fill was subsequently shortened in its central part, and has been uplifted and topographically inverted. Arizaro basin is not related to known basin-bounding faults, nor does it exhibit a peripheral belt of coarse-grained facies. Sandstone modal framework compositions are arkosic, but not as rich in volcanic lithic fragments as intra-arc basin sandstones. Detrital zircon U-Pb age spectra implicate sources in western Argentina and northern Chile and the local Miocene magmatic arc. Depositional-age zircons are present in most sandstones analyzed, and zircon U-Pb ages from volcanic tuffs provide independent chronological control. Tectonic subsidence initiated slowly, accelerated to ~0.6 mm/yr during the medial stage of basin development, and tapered off to zero as the basin began to shorten internally and topographically invert after ~10 Ma. The Arizaro basin could have developed by gravitational foundering of a dense Rayleigh-Taylor-type instability. To match the topographic evolution of the Arizaro basin, numerical models indicate that the density anomaly must be <60 km in diameter and originate at ~50 km depth, within the deep part of the thickened orogenic crust. Gravitational removal is accompanied by shortening of the overlying crust and surface uplift. Mantle removal in this region occurred by piecemeal processes, rather than wholesale removal. The model developed here may be relevant for other hinterland basins throughout the central Andes. Structure of the lithosphere from analysis of satellite data J. Ebbing Department of Geosciences, Kiel University, Germany Abstract: Understanding the interplay between mantle and lithosphere dynamics requires an integrated approach to estimate its physical properties. In recent years, it has become evident that the thermal structure and composition of the upper mantle have a large influence on topography. Lithospheric structures are affected by large-scale tectonic processes and are, in turn, expected to influence the amount, localization and style of surface deformation. Prominent changes in the upper mantle are expected at the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (e.g., partial melting) and at cratonic edges. These changes can be recorded by a number of different geophysical data sets, sensitive to seismic wave velocity, electrical resistivity and density. Despite the increasing amount of geophysical observables, the heterogeneous data distribution is still a challenge for large scale study areas. Globally available data sets with homogenous coverage are satellite data, as for example the GOCE gravity gradient mission or the recently launched SWARM magnetic field mission. These satellite missions add a scale of observation that cannot be achieved at the Earth’s surface. For example, the gravity gradients from the GOCE mission data have a depth sensitivity that makes them a useful tool to study the density distribution in the uppermost mantle. The characteristic of the gradients is that they are not sensitive to the sublithospheric regional trend (unlike terrestrial gravity and the geoid), but especially sensitive to the uppermost 150 km of the lithosphere. Sensitivity tests show that if reasonable crustal models exist, with the use of satellite gravity gradients, it enables us to distinguish between density domains influenced by the thermal structure or composition of the upper mantle, and herby to link crust and upper mantle in great detail, which makes them an ideal data set to be used in combination with seismic tomography. From the surface Topography to the Upper mantle beneath Central-Iberian-Zone. The ALCUDIA Seismic Experiments Siddique Akhtar Ehsan(1) Ramon Carbonell(1) Puy Ayarza(2) David Martí(1) David Jesús Martínez-Poyatos(3) José Fernando Simancas(3) Antonio Azor(3) Concepción Ayala(4, 1) Montserrat Torné(1) Ignacio Marzan(1) Andrés Pérez-Estaún(1) 1) Department of Structure and Dynamics of the Earth, Institute of Earth Sciences Jaume Almera, ICTJA-CSIC, Lluis Sole i Sabaris s/n, 08028 Barcelona, Spain 2) Department of Geology, University of Salamanca, 37008 Salamanca, Spain 3) Department of Geodynamics, Faculty of Science, University of Granada, E-18071 Granada, Spain 4) Instituto Geológico y Minero de España (IGME), C/ La Calera, 1, 28760 Tres Cantos- Madrid" Poster Abstract: Multi-seismic experiments acquired across the central and southern part of the Iberian Peninsula provide a new insight into the structure and nature of the lithosphere beneath these areas. Normal incidence and wide-angle seismic reflection data acquired in the area resolve the internal architecture and constrain the distribution of the physical properties along an almost 280 km long transect that samples the major tectonic domains of the Central Iberian Zone (CIZ) and the associated suture (e.g., the Central Unit, CU). A high quality image, ~230 km long, down to 45 km depth (~15 s TWTT) is provided by the normal incidence data set. Based on the reflectivity characteristics, the image can be divided into an upper and mid-lower crust, ~13 km and ~18 km thick, respectively. The wide-angle seismic transect extended the crustal section towards the north across the Madrid Basin. This, latter data set also sample the CIZ until the CU. This is ~280 km long profile which provides very strong constraints on the distribution of physical properties (P wave and S wave velocities, Poisson's ratio) of the upper lithosphere. The PiP and PmP seismic phases constrain two discontinuities: the brittle to ductile discontinuity at ~13-19 km and the Moho boundary at ~31-35.5 km. Currently both appear to act as decoupling surfaces and are interpreted to represent levels of lithological/rheological variations. The internal structure of the Moho is further discussed taking into account the characteristics of the PmP reflections. Furthermore, low fold wide-angle P and S wave stacks reveal a marked crust-mantle transition which is most probably 5-6 km thick and relatively complex structure. The geometrical relationships of this structure with the crustal fabrics of the normal incidence image suggest that the Moho is most probably a result of the re-equilibration and/or other lithospheric processes active after the Variscan collision. Crustal and Upper Mantle Structural Constraints on the Topography of the southern Central Iberian Zone Siddique Akhtar Ehsan(1), Ramon Carbonell(1), Puy Ayarza(2), David Martí(1), David Jesús Martínez-Poyatos(3), José Fernando Simancas(3), Antonio Azor(3), Concepción Ayala(4, 1), Montserrat Torné(1), Ignacio Marzan(1) Andrés Pérez-Estaún(1) 1) Department of Structure and Dynamics of the Earth, Institute of Earth Sciences Jaume Almera, ICTJA-CSIC, Lluis Sole i Sabaris s/n, 08028 Barcelona, Spain 2) Department of Geology, University of Salamanca, 37008 Salamanca, Spain 3) Department of Geodynamics, Faculty of Science, University of Granada, E-18071 Granada, Spain 4) Instituto Geológico y Minero de España (IGME), C/ La Calera, 1, 28760 Tres Cantos- Madrid" Institution of Earth Sciences Jaume Almera (ICTJA-CSIC) Abstract: Multi-seismic experiments ALCUDIA which include normal incidence and wide-angle seismic reflection data reveal detailed crustal and lithospheric structure of the central to the southwestern Iberia. The experiments provided an opportunity to analyse the nature and possible origin of the Mohorovicic discontinuity and map in cross-section the distribution of the physical properties across the Central Iberian Massif. The normal incidence deep seismic reflection transect, acquired in summer 2007 provides a detailed image of an intra-continental Variscan orogenic crust (the Central Iberian Zone, CIZ) and its suture zone with the Ossa-Morena Zone in southwest Iberia. This seismic image shows a slightly less reflective upper crust, which has been interpreted to be ~13 km thick. The deformation patterns in the mid-lower crust appear to correspond to ductile boudinage structures, thrusting and an upper mantle wedge. The Mohorovicic discontinuity has been interpreted to be the sharp, sudden decrease in reflectivity identified at 10.5 s TWTT (~31-33 km depth). The velocity structure, P and S waves was constrained by conventional iterative forward model of the travel time picks digitized from the high-resolution wide-angle seismic reflection data acquired in early May 2012. The P wave velocity model reveals significant lateral velocity variations in the upper crust down to ~20 km depth. The mid-lower crust is identified by a sharp gradient in velocity at ~13 km and ~20 km beneath the CIZ in the south and the Madrid Basin in the north, respectively. The base of the crust is well constrained by the high amplitude PmP arrivals and it is located at ~31 km in the southern end and at ~35.5 km below the northern end of the profile. These data provides for the first time a significant piece of evidence for a smooth and gradual increase of crustal thickness beneath the Madrid Basin, Central Iberian Peninsula. Small-scale subduction in odd margins M. Fernandez M. Torne J. Vergés E. Casciello Institute of Earth Sciences Jaume Almera - CSIC, Barcelona, Spain Abstract: Subduction is a prime consequence of plate tectonics where, an oceanic plate subducts beneath a continental or an oceanic upper plate. Common observations in subducting regions, characterized by large oceanic subducting plates, are: i) long and quasi-linear subduction trenches, ii) active seismicity and a well-defined Wadati-Benioff zone, iii) unique subduction polarity, and iv) orogenic volcanism and HP-LT metamorphism in the upper plate. Depending on the balance between convergence and subduction rates, shortening or extension takes place in the upper plate, and vertical and horizontal sublithospheric mantle flow develops. These simple observations can be dramatically modified when the subducting plate formed at odd plate margins, dominated by very slow spreading rates, strong transtensional regimes, and a high degree of margin segmentation. Examples of odd margins are the Ligurian-Tethys, which developed during Jurassic-early Cretaceous times due to the opening of the Central Atlantic Ocean, forming a series of en-echelon margins with a thin crust of continental to oceanic nature and, occasionally, exhumed upper mantle. The subsequent Africa-Eurasia convergence resulted in the consumption of these odd margins becoming characterized by diffuse seismicity, well developed back-arc basins, uneven distribution of metamorphism and volcanism, and transform faults separating small-scale subduction domains that may show opposite polarities. Tectonic controls on the Mesopotamian foreland basin evolution: coupled tectonic/surface processes modeling C. Fillon (1) D.Garcia-Castellanos (1) J. Vergés (1) (1) Institute of Earth Sciences Jaume Almera -CSIC, Barcelona, Spain Abstract: Identifying how changes in plate configuration affect wide and long-lived drainage systems is key to decipher between climate and tectonic forcing on sedimentary basins evolution. The Mesopotamian basin is a plate-scale foreland basin presumably linked to the tectonic load of the Zagros mountain belt. The current drainage pattern shows the two main river systems (Tigris and Euphrates) draining the basin longitudinally, likely to be influenced by other large-scale geodynamic events as well, such as the uplift of the Anatolian Plateau (Middle Miocene) to the NW and/or the Red Sea opening and flank tilting to the W, starting in early Miocene. In addition to these lithospheric-scale processes, the Mesopotamian basin developed where the Neogene closure of the gateway between Mediterranean sea and Indian ocean occurred, therefore recording the continentalization of the area. By using an integrated modeling of surface processes, lithospheric flexure and kinematic fault deformation, we test the influences of each main tectonic units on the basin evolution. The numerical model is particularly designed to study the 3D foreland basin evolution and to identify large-scale relationships between tectonic movements and sediment transport and deposition. We specifically aim at reproducing the drainage conditions in the basin, the flexural profile and the sediment thicknesses and geometry of deposition, by investigating the basin history at the scale of the Arabian plate (3000 km x 1200 km), over a long period of time (i.e. since 35 Ma to present day), and with integrating realistic climatic conditions. The main results reveal the need for an external load in addition to the Zagros to reproduce the flexural profile of the basin, suggesting a significant contribution from deep geodynamic events occurring in early to middle Miocene times in shaping the present day Mesopotamian basin. Coeval thrusting and strike-slip faulting during Early Miocene collision in the Western Betics (Southern Spain) Gianluca Frasca (1) Frédéric Gueydan (2) Jean-Pierre Brun (1) (1) Géosciences Rennes, UR1, France (2) Géosciences Montpellier, UM2, France Abstract: "In recent years, researchers have been debating about the tectonic origin of the arcuate Betic-Rif orogenic belt, which surrounds the Alboran Sea at the western end of the Mediterranean Sea. In this talk, we investigate the tectonic units cropping out in the Western Betics (Malaga region, Southern Spain) with the main goal of reconstructing the Miocene evolution of the area. New structural data and geological mapping together with available data allow us to identify the main structural features of the area. Two strike-slip corridors outline two E-W elongated tectonic blocks with different lithological composition. The northern block is mainly composed by a lower Miocene basin and by Mesozoic sediments, while the southern block mostly by mantle and metamorphic rocks. Both the orientation of folds and of fault slip-vectors in the two corridors and the foliation trajectories in the surrounding rocks are compatible with a dextral movement. We will demonstrate that the main actors of the Miocene tectonics of the Western Betic Cordillera are these E-W strike-slip corridors. The corridors terminate in coeval N50 directed thrusts that we interpret as horse-tail splays. We consider then these strike-slip corridors as lateral ramps of the thrust system observed in the area. We conclude that corridors and thrusts are responsible for the westward emplacement of the Alboran thinned lithosphere on top of the Iberian margin. Two enigmas in lithospheric dynamics: initiation of subduction zones and ridge-transform spreading patterns T. Gerya "Institute of Geophysics, ETH-Zurich, Sonneggstrasse 5, Zurich Switzerland, Abstract: Global networks of subduction trenches and ridge-transform spreading patterns represent inherent surface features of terrestrial plate tectonics. A fundamental unresolved problem is how these topographic networks formed and why they are maintained. Although most of the presently active intra-oceanic subduction zones are relatively young and initiated during the Cenozoic, subduction initiation process remains controversial. We investigated spontaneous intra-oceanic subduction initiation with new numerical hydro-thermo-mechanical approach, in which solid rock deformation and fluid percolation are fully coupled (Dymkova and Gerya, 2013). With laboratory-measured brittle rock strength, subduction can naturally start only in the presence of porous fluid inside oceanic crust and pre-existing fracture zones. Fluid percolation is localized along a system of multiple listric propagating thrusts with coalescing nearly horizontal roots located near the oceanic Moho of the forming subducting slab. High fluid pressure along this forming subduction interface controls rheological decoupling between the plates. Initiation of orthogonal ridge-transform spreading patterns remains contentious. We investigated this process with the use of high-resolution 3D petrological-thermo-mechanical numerical models (Gerya, 2013). The resulting geometry of an oceanic spreading pattern depends strongly on the initial offset of spreading centers and the magnitude of fracture healing rate. Three different characteristic long-term spreading modes are obtained: (1) ridge-transform patterns, (2) single ridges and (3) spreading centers with an intermediate plate. Orthogonal ridge-transform oceanic spreading patterns form gradually from moderate initial offsets of 40-60 km and become fully established several million years after the plate breakup. We demonstrated that the ridge-transform system is a long-term plate growth pattern that is generally different from an initial plate rifting pattern. Steady-state orthogonal geometry of the ridge-transform system is governed by 180o rotational symmetry requirement for open space occupation. Citations: Dymkova, D., Gerya, T. (2013) Geophys. Res. Lett., 40, 5671–5676. Gerya, T. (2013) Phys. Earth Planet. Interiors, 214, 35–52 African lithosphere geometry: Geoid and elevation constraints on Moho and LAB topography. Jan Globig (1) Manel Fernandez (1) Montserrat Torné (1) Claudio Faccenna (2) (1) Institute of Earth Sciences Jaume Almera - CSIC, Group of Dynamics of the Lithosphere (G.D.L.), Barcelona, Spain ([email protected]) (2) University Roma TRE, Dept. of Geological Sciences, Italy" Abstract: The African continent offers provoking conditions to investigate the relation between its lithospheric structure and its anomalous regional long wavelength topography. The variable topography of the continent has been intensively studied and is strongly discussed in terms of its age and origin. To our understanding of surface topography knowledge of crustal thickness is of first-oder importance, which is still incomplete for vast areas of the African continent. Here we present insights into the continent’s crustal and lithospheric thickness which are major requirements in investigating the evolution of African topography and mainly come from global and continental models often missing a proper relation between elevation, density and depth to the Moho and LAB. For this purpose we address the 1D study of the detailed structure of the African lithosphere (Moho and LAB geometry) applying a four-layered model composed of crust and lithospheric mantle plus sea water and asthenosphere, assuming Airy isostasy and using, as constraints, elevation, geoid and thermal data. To better verify our crustal thickness model we test it against a comprehensive compilation of existing Moho depth estimates from active and passive seismic studies across the continent. Relating better the surface topography with the depth to the Moho and the LAB our approach is seen to support the discussion around the strongly debated processes responsible for the today’s bimodal distribution of basin-and swell topography. From topography to topography: Surface elevation, Moho geometry and African lithosphere dynamics Jan Globig (1) Manel Fernandez (1) Montserrat Torné (1) Claudio Faccenna (2) (1) Institute of Earth Sciences Jaume Almera - CSIC, Group of Dynamics of the Lithosphere (G.D.L.), Barcelona, Spain ([email protected]) (2) University Roma TRE, Dept. of Geological Sciences, Italy Poster Abstract: "Despite increasing efforts in seismic surveying and geophysical studies to unravel the structure of the African lithosphere,vast areas of the African continent, especially in the central part, still lack reliable data on Moho and LAB depth. As Africa offers provoking conditions to investigate the relation between deep and upper mantle thermal and/or compositional anomalies and its anomalous regional long wavelength topography we present insights into the continent’s crustal and lithospheric thickness. For this purpose we address the 1D study of the detailed structure of the African lithosphere (Moho and LAB geometry) applying a four-layered model composed of crust and lithospheric mantle plus sea water and asthenosphere, assuming Airy isostasy and using, as constraints, elevation, geoid and thermal data. Furthermore, to better verify the crustal thickness model we test it against a comprehensive compilation of existing Moho depth estimates from active and passive seismic studies across the continent. Additionally existing models of thermo-tectonic age of crust, sediment thickness and the thermochemical state of mantle domains from global and regional tomography are used to discuss the strongly debated processes responsible for the today’s bimodal distribution of basin-and swell topography." A single cause for uplift of the Central and Eastern Anatolian plateau? R. Govers (1) J. Bartol (1) (1) Department of Earth Sciences, Utrecht University, Netherlands, Abstract: Regional observations suggest that the Central Anatolian plateau (central Turkey) has risen by more than 1 km since the Tortonian (~8 Ma) while significant crustal shortening did not occur. This uplift was preceded by the onset of widespread volcanism (~14-9Ma). The lithospheric context of these events is however unknown. For the Eastern Anatolian plateau, similar events have been attributed to the late-stage evolution of the northern Neotethys slab, resulting in delamination and slab break-off. Recent tomographic results indicate that this slab extended beneath both below the Eastern and Central Anatolian plateau just prior to delamination. We propose a new lithospheric scenario for the regional evolution in the Aegean-Anatolia-Near East region that combines a recent compilation of surface geology data with the structure of the upper mantle. Following CretaceousEocene closure of the northern Neotethys, Africa-Eurasia convergence was accommodated by horizontal subduction at a trench that was located south of Anatolia. Like before the closure, the northern Neotethys slab continued to sink into the deeper mantle beneath the Izmir-AnkaraErzincan suture. In the early Miocene (~20-15Ma), the northern Neotethys slab started to retreat southward to the trench, resulting in delamination of the lithospheric mantle. The last part of this scenario is testable, whether delamination can explain the uplift of both the Central and Eastern Anatolian plateau. In the east, uplift due to collision of Arabia is included. We use a coupled thermal-flexural model of the lithosphere. Delamination can explain the average present-day longwavelength topography of the Central Anatolian plateau. For the Eastern Anatolian plateau, delamination explains half the present-day elevation: the other half resulted from crustal thickening. We therefore propose to refer to central and east Anatolia since the middle Miocene as "the Anatolian plateau". Cretaceous to Miocene long wavelength landforms of Africa and NW Europe: climate, mantle dynamics and lithosphere deformations controls. F. Guillocheau and TopoAfrica working group Géosciences Rennes - UMR 6118 Université de Rennes1-CNRS, Campus de Beaulieu, 35042 Rennes cedex Abstract: "In addition to the mountain belts and the rift shoulders, the Earth relief is characterized by planation surfaces preserved as plateaus or plains, later more or less incised by rivers. Africa is characterized by a succession of plateaus (Kalahari) and swells (Central-African, HoggarTibesti…) alternating with “basins” (Congo, Chad, Sudan...) with a wavelength of few thousands years (very long wavelength). NW Europe displays a similar pattern with “highs” (French Massif Central, Ardennes, Cornwall, Ardennes-Eifel…) and “lows” (Aquitaine, Paris-London, Western Approaches..) with a lower wavelength of one order of magnitude (x100 km). In both cases the landforms are similar: weathered planation surfaces (etchplains) degraded by pediments and or pediplains, more or less weathered. The uplift history is based on (1) the stepping of the different landforms and (2) the available age constraints (dated weathering profiles, relationships between sediments, volcanism and landforms, basin siliciclastic sediment budget..). African reliefs are Cenozoic in age, younger than the Early-Middle Eocene (55-40 Ma). The only old relief of Africa is the Southern African (Kalahari) Plateau that experienced a two steps evolution, a first uplift during Late Cretaceous contemporaneous with high erosion under humid climatic conditions, followed by a second uplift during Late Eocene – Early Oligocene. The paroxysm of Africa uplift was during Miocene times (20-10 Ma) in response to mantle-scale processes. In contrast, NW European reliefs have a much more complex history, exhumation and burial during Cretaceous and two times uplift during Cenozoic times. Those quite “old” relief (compared to Africa) recorded the lithospheric deformations due to the relative movements of Africa, Iberia and Eurasia. Multiphase halokinematic deformation and changing transport direction in the Levant Basin Zohar Gvirtzman (1, 2) (1) Geological Survey of Israel, Jerusalem, Israel (2) Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel" Abstract: "The Levant Basin provides a unique opportunity to study the early evolution of a salt giant when it still behaves as an intact layer. Newly-acquired high-quality three dimensional seismic surveys reveal previously undetected features on the seabed as well as weak reflections within the buried Messinian salt. The weak, yet observable, reflectors within the salt open the gate for classical stratigraphic analysis that enables distinguishing between syn- and post-depositional deformations. While numerous studies have shown that salt related deformation in the Levant Basin began in the Late Pliocene or Early Pleistocene, these reflectors indicate that the first salt related deformation event occurred 3-4 my earlier, in the middle of the Messinian Salinity Crisis. This interpretation reopens another question regarding the observed SW-NE shortening direction, which is approximately orthogonal to the gliding direction expected from the northwestward tilting of the basin. Whereas previous studies related this shortening direction to salt flow away from the Nile Cone, our data indicate that this early deformation predates the accumulation of the Nile Cone and therefore requires a different explanation. On the other hand, the present day seabed morphology offshore Sinai with its circum Nile fold belt confirms that the recent tectonic transport pattern is indeed controlled by squeezing away salt from under the Nile Cone. Moreover, we show that additional folds previously explained by westward gliding of the Plio-Quaternary section downdip the Israeli slope are, in fact, caused by updip climbing of this section eastwards as a result of the far field salt flow pattern. In general, we show that the contractional domain related to salt tectonics is far more complex than previously thought and that the overburden and the salt deform synchronously, but not necessarily harmonically. Linking lithosphere deformation and sedimentary basin formation over multiple scales Ritske S. Huismans Department of Earth Science, University of Bergen, Allégaten 41, N-5007 Bergen, Norway Abstract: Here we focus on the relationships between tectonic deformation and sedimentary basin formation. Resolving the interaction and feedback between tectonic crust-lithosphere scale deformation and surface processes through erosion of elevated areas and formation of sedimentary basins over multiple scales has been a long-standing challenge. While forward process based models have been successful at showing that a feedback is expected between tectonic deformation and redistribution of mass at the earth’s surface by erosion, transport, and deposition, demonstrating this coupling for natural systems has been an even greater challenge and is strongly debated. Observational constraints on crust-lithosphere deformation and surface processes are typically collected at highly varying spatial and temporal scales, while forward process based models are typically run at either very large lithosphere-mantle scale, or at the scale of the sedimentary basin making it difficult to investigate and explore the detailed interaction and feedback between these systems. Here I will report on recent advances in forward modelling linking crust-lithosphere deformation with surface processes over a large range of scales resolving tectonic plate scale deformation and sedimentary basin formation at stratigraphic scales. The forward numerical models indicate a linkage and interaction between the structural style of thick-skinned large-scale mountain belt and rift-passive margin formation, erosion-transport-deposition processes operating at the surface, and the thin-skinned deformation occurring in the associated sedimentary basins. Dynamic ups and downs of mountain belts: the Himalaya L. Husson ISTerre, CNRS, Univ. Grenoble Alpes, Grenoble, France Abstract: "In many mountain belts, the record of uplift and subsidence is often at odds with crustal tectonics and shortening history. The canonical explanations that are based on lithospheric flexure or removal of the mantle lithosphere also often fail to explain all observations. Transient dynamic topography above evolving subduction slabs is an alternative mechanism that reconciles all observations. The Himalaya provide a good example. There, fast uplift and exhumation of the Himalaya and Tibet and fast subsidence in the foreland basin portray the first order Neogene evolution of the IndianEurasian collision zone. Dynamic topography over the southward folded Indian slab explains the modern location of the foreland depocenter. Backwards in time, that deflection was located underneath the Himalaya and S. Tibet. The Neogene relative southward drift of the slab and associated dynamic topography explains the uplift of the Himalaya and the fast subsidence of the foreland basin. While competing with other processes, transient dynamic topography may thus explain to a large extent both the uplift and subsidence history of the Himalaya and of foreland basin, without any a priori need for removal of the lithospheric mantle nor for the elastic flexure of the Indian plate. Similar reasoning, with different subduction histories, equally applies to the Andes, the Carpathians, or the Aegean." Dynamics of lithospheric thinning and mantle melting by edge-driven convection: Application to Moroccan Atlas mountains L. Kaislaniemi (1) J. van Hunen (1) (1) Department of Earth Sciences, University of Durham, Durham, United Kingdom Abstract: Edge-driven convection (EDC) forms in the upper mantle at locations of lithosphere thickness gradients, e.g., craton edges. In this study we show how the traditional style of EDC, a convection cell governed by the cold downwelling below an edge alternates with another style of EDC, in which the convection cell forms as a secondary feature with a hot asthenospheric shear flow from underneath the thicker lithosphere. These alternating EDC styles produce episodic lithosphere erosion and decompression melting. Three-dimensional models of EDC show that convection rolls form perpendicular to the thickness gradient at the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary. Stagnantlid convection scaling laws are used to gain further insight in the underlying physical processes. Application of our models to the Moroccan Atlas mountains region shows that the combination of these two styles of EDC can reproduce many of the observations from the Atlas mountains, including two distinct periods of Cenozoic volcanism, a semicontinuous corridor of thinned lithosphere under the Atlas mountains, and piecewise delamination of the lithosphere. A very good match between observations and numerical models is found for the lithosphere thicknesses across the study area, amounts of melts produced, and the length of the quiet gap in between volcanic episodes show quantitative match to observations. Seismic imaging of the Pacific slab beneath Japan and northeast China: deep water transportation and enigma of the off-arc volcanism Hitoshi Kawakatsu Earthquake Research Institute, the University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan Abstract: We present seismic image indicating the transportation of water into the mantle wedge of the subduction zone beneath northeastern Japan (Kawakatsu & Watada, 2007, Science). The reflectivity profiles of seismic waves obtained from migrated receiver functions (RFs) of teleseismic earthquakes recorded by the dense Japanese seismic network, Hi-net, show strong signature of the dehydration of the subducting oceanic crust in the depth interval of 50-90km. Below this depth range, a low-velocity layer on the top of the subducting plate, which we infer as a channel of serpentinite that brings water into the deep mantle, is observed. Our result indicates that a significant amount of water (several weight percent H2O) is transported at least to a depth ~130150km through this channel. Further signature corresponding the low-velocity channel atop of the slab can be traced as deep as ~350km, suggesting at least water may be transported to the depth. Below 350km right beneath central/southwestern Japan, there also exist signatures inside of the slab which we attribute to those originated from the postulated meta-stable olivine wedge (MOW). The existence of the MOW indicates insignificant amount of water (~100ppm) present in the subducting slab in the region, thus a deep "dry" cold slab (Kawakatsu & Yoshioka, 2011, EPSL). Water seems mainly transported along the top surface of the subducting plate. To investigate the fate of the deep slab that often stagnates in the transition zone beneath Japan and NE China, we deployed 120 broadband stations in northeast China (NECESSArray). Tomographic and various images of stagnating Pacific slab using NECESSArray data brought a surprising result: the absence of a long flat stagnating slab beneath NE China. We speculate its relation to the enigmatic off-arc volcanism associated with the Changbaishan volcanism (Tang et al., 2014, Nature Geoscience). Coupling surface and mantle dynamics using laboratory experiments A. Kiraly (1) C. Faccenna (1) F. Funiciello (1) A. Sembroni (1) (1) LET, Laboratory of Experimental Tectonics, Department of Sciences, Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Rome, Italy Abstract: Thermal or density anomalies located beneath the lithosphere are thought to generate dynamic topography to compensate the viscous stresses originating from the anomaly driven mantle flow. In addition, recent modeling shows that surface processes, such as erosion and sedimentation, may influence the deformation of the Earth’s surface, interfering with deeper crustal and mantle signals. To study the link between the surface and deep processes and related effects on topographic signals, we designed a three-dimensional (3-D) laboratory apparatus made of a thin multilayer viscous sheet floating on a uniform Newtonian viscous fluid where a buoyant sphere progressively rises up. The setup is constituted and scaled down to natural gravity field, with mantle and lithosphere simulated by Newtonian viscous glucose syrup and silicon putty, respectively. Surface processes are simulated assuming a simple diffusive erosion law producing the downhill motion of a thin viscous material away from high topography. The deep mantle upwelling is triggered by the rise of a buoyant sphere. The model is able to re-create the movements of shallow material from topographic highs to basins triggered by the dynamic uplift of the lithosphere. The diffusion of the surface material creates isostatic uplift and subsidence on the center of - and externally from the loading area, respectively. The results of these models along with the parametric analysis show the possibility to successfully couple surface and deep processes within a single 3-D model. New Mesozoic pelitic eclogites from the western Rhodope (Chalkidiki, northern Greece) Konstantinos Kydonakis (1) Evangelos Moulas (2,3) Dimitrios Kostopoulos (4) Elias Chatzitheodoridis (5) Jean-Pierre Brun (1) (1) Géosciences Rennes, UMR 6118, Université Rennes1, Campus de Beaulieu, 35042 Rennes, France (2) Institut des sciences de la Terra, Université de Lausanne, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland (3) Department of Earth Sciences, ETH Zurich, Sonneggstrasse 5, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland (4) Faculty of Geology, Dep. of Mineralogy and Petrology, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Panepistimioupoli, Zographou, Athens 15784, Greece (5) National Technical University of Athens, School of Mining and Metallurgical Engineering, Department of Geological Sciences, Laboratory of Mineralogy" Poster Abstract: "The Chalkidiki block of Northern Greece is the southwesternmost part of the Rhodope and both are located at the most internal part of the Aegean. The eastern part of the Chalkidiki block is a basement complex made largely of Palaeozoic orthogneisses and intercalated paragneisses that were metamorphosed during the Mesozoic. The basement has been considered as part of the Rhodopean hanging-wall, an assignment which is supported by the lack of HP relicts and the regional medium-pressure/high-temperature (MP/HT) amphibolite-facies metamorphic imprint. The basement is juxtaposed, to the west, to units that carry evidence for an early Mesozoic highpressure/low-temperature (HP/LT) event through a sharp NW-trending contact. The questions set are based around i) the nature of the contact that brings together HP and Barrovian MP/HT rocks and ii) the possibility of the existence of a largely erased HP event from the basement before the regional Barrovian MP/HT overprint. Toward that direction, we studied garnet-staurolite-mica schists from the eastern part of the MP/HT basement by means of micro-textures, mineral chemistry and isochemical phase diagram sections in the system NCKFMASHTiMn (Na2O-CaO-K2O-FeO-MgO-Al2O3-SiO2-H2O-TiO2-MnO). Model results suggest the existence of a high-pressure/medium temperature metamorphic event (P≈1.9GPa, T≈520°C) that preceded the re-equilibration at MP/HT conditions (P≈1.2GPa, T≈620°C). Our concluding remark concern the existence, in a Barrovian complex of northern Greece, of a largely erased HP mineral assemblage due to re-equilibration under higher temperature conditions. In the light of our findings, the basement complex of the Chalkidiki block fits a common tectonometamorphic evolution with both the HP units, to the west, and the high-grade Rhodopean gneisses, to the northeast. The model involves a Jurassic northward subduction and subsequent Cretaceous HT overprint with the metamorphic intensity increasing toward the transport direction (i.e., toward northeast)." Mesozoic Tectonics of the Aegean Konstantinos Kydonakis (1) Jean-Pierre Brun (1) Dimitrios Sokoutis (2,3) Frédéric Gueydan (4) (1) Géosciences Rennes, UMR 6118, Université Rennes1, Campus de Beaulieu, 35042 Rennes, France (2) Utrecht University, Faculty of Earth Science, Budapestlaan 4, 3584 CD Utrecht, The Netherlands (3) University of Oslo, Department of Geosciences, PO Box 1047 Blindern, NO-316 Oslo, Norway (4) Géosciences Montpellier, UMR 5243, Université Montpellier II, place E. Bataillon, 34095 Montpellier, France" Abstract: The Aegean started forming during middle Eocene back-arc extension superimposed on the previously formed Hellenic Thrust Wedge. The latter was made by Jurassic - Cretaceous accretion of three continental fragments and the closure of two intervening oceanic domains. The thickened crustal-scale wedge collapsed, in a process driven by the Hellenic slab rollback, triggering largescale extension of core complex type localised at the beginning to the hinterland of the system known as the Rhodope. In the Rhodope, the Mesozoic convergence-related fabrics were partly reworked during Cenozoic extension. However, the relatively unexplored southwesternmost part of the Rhodope, namely the Chalkidiki block, behaved as a coherent block during Cenozoic extension and largely escaped the related deformation. For the purpose of this work we have selected to study the Chalkidiki block. We carried out field mapping measuring the geometry of the deformation fabrics. We evaluated the intensity of the metamorphic conditions using isochemical phase diagram sections and demonstrated the existence of an early eclogite-facies event before the regional amphibolite-facies overprint. We performed high- (U/Pb in zircon and monazite) and medium-temperature (40Ar/39Ar on micas) geochronology coupled with low-temperature thermochronology and inverse thermal history modelling and defined the complete thermal path (T-t) of the study area from Cretaceous cooling to Eocene near surface exposure. We modelled the geological evolution of the Rhodope with reference to the exhumation of the lower crust during core complex formation. In particular, using small-scale laboratory experiments we tested whether the gravity spreading of a crustal-scale thrust wedge that undergoes extension is a suitable process for the development of the Rhodopean core complexes during the early opening of the Aegean. We exemplified that strain localisation and core complex development near the backstop of the area affected by extension is intrinsic to the pre-collapse geometry of the orogenic wedge." North Aegean core complexes, the gravity spreading of a thrust wedge Konstantinos Kydonakis (1) Jean-Pierre Brun (1) Dimitrios Sokoutis (2,3) (1) Géosciences Rennes, UMR 6118, Université Rennes1, Campus de Beaulieu, 35042 Rennes, France (2) Utrecht University, Faculty of Earth Science, Budapestlaan 4, 3584 CD Utrecht, The Netherlands (3) University of Oslo, Department of Geosciences, PO Box 1047 Blindern, NO-316 Oslo, Norway" “Poster” Abstract: The North Aegean core complexes formed at the rear of the Aegean back-arc domain (Rhodope) and started their development soon after the end of continental convergence and pilling up of the Hellenic Thrust Wedge when the subducting slab started to rollback. A series of laboratory experiments were performed to test whether the gravity spreading of a thrust wedge is a suitable process for the development of the North Aegean core complexes during early back-arc extension. Wedge-shaped models were built with sand and silicone putty to represent the brittle and the ductile crust, respectively, and variable boundary velocities and sand-layer geometries were tested. Extension was applied at constant rate at the wedge front and, simultaneously, the wedge base was tilted toward horizontal to simulate the isostatic re-adjustment due to wedge thinning. The models exemplify that extension can be either distributed (i.e., wide rift mode) or localised (i.e., core complex mode) but always located at the wedge rear. Because in gravity spreading the amount of horizontal stretching directly depends on layer thickness, the wedge rear that is thicker undergoes stronger stretching. Core complexes developed in models with thicker brittle layer (higher frictional strength) and lower stretching rates (lower ductile strength). Both core complex location, at the wedge rear, and detachment location/dip are interdependent and intrinsically related to the initial wedge shape of the extending system. The experimental model displays striking similarities with the extensional pattern of the North Aegean in terms of: i) location, size and shape of core complexes as well as their sequence of development, and ii) detachment location and dip. The model suggests that it is the initial wedge geometry of the system and the hot and thick (i.e., weak) nature of the crust at the onset of extension that controlled the extensional pattern of the North Aegean Domain." Thermal perturbation, mineralogical assemblage and rheology variations induced by dyke emplacement in the crust A. Lavecchia (1, 2) S. Clark (1) F. Beekman (2) S. Cloetingh (2) (1) Simula Research Laboratory, Fornebu, Norway (2) Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands Poster Abstract: Our model consists of a two-dimensional physical model, simulating a thermal perturbation induced by a sequence of basaltic dykes along a two-layered crustal section. The geometry of the model is similar to sequence thicknesses registered in rift areas, such as in the Afar Rift case, and a temperature-dependent thermal conductivity is considered. Results take into account metamorphic reactions in a MnKFMASH system, relative to disappearance of chlorite, appearance of garnet and staurolite, disappearance of staurolite, appearance of allumosilicate and muscovite and biotite dehydration reactions. The reaction enthalpies are calculated and considered in the total thermal balance. Subsequently, variations in mineralogical associations with temperature are used to obtain the averaged values of rheological parameters for the multiphase rocks and to calculate the variation in the rheological behavior during the simulation time. We have investigated: 1) a quartz-feldspatic crust (QF), 2) a micaschists crust (M), and 3) a crust whose mineralogical assemblage approximates estimations of chemical composition occurring in literature (CC). We find that temperature profiles are strongly influenced by metamorphism, with variations in the Tt paths higher than 30 °C. The effect is pronounced in the lower crust, where temperature peaks are retained for longer periods, and negligible (but still occurring) in the upper crust. The rheology of the crust is strongly dependent on mineralogical association variation during time. In the M and CC case, we observe a weak upper crust, but a strong and partially brittle lower crust: these strong rheology contrasts may lead to strain partitioning and decoupling. Regarding the dykes aureole, it increase its strength at the very early phases of emplacement. It may cause a switch in dykes emplacement location and, with a repeated injection in time, an increased strength of the rifting area, with subsequent transition from crust thinning rifting to magma assisted rifting mechanism." Seismic Structure, Anisotropy and Dynamics of the Lithosphere and Asthenosphere S. Lebedev (1) (1) Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies Abstract: "Seismic anisotropy reflects complex patterns of deformation and flow within the Earth. The rheological behaviour of the lithosphere displays large variations, radial, lateral, and in time. The coldest upper crust is brittle; the lower crust and lithospheric mantle will flow like viscous fluids when relatively warm but will resist deformation when cold. Below the lithosphere, the viscous asthenosphere undergoes continuous, three-dimensional flow. The layered, evolving deformation within the lithosphere and asthenosphere thus results in a complex distribution of anisotropic fabric, which varies in the 3 spatial dimensions as well as in its age. Surface-wave data, in particular from dense arrays of broad-band seismic stations, can constrain 3D distributions of seismic velocities and azimuthal and radial anisotropy in the entire lithosphereasthenosphere depth range. Beneath the reworked and stretched crust of Tuscany, for example, the isotropic-average shear speeds show a decrease around 60 km depth, while azimuthal anisotropy changes at the same depth from an E-W to NNW-SSE orientation. The two lines of evidence are thus consistent and suggest a 60-km deep lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary. This implies that the new mantle lithosphere has formed very recently, following the westward accretion of Tuscany’s crust; both the lithospheric thickening and the concurrent crustal stretching must have resulted in subsidence. Beneath Tibet, very low crustal seismic velocities suggest partial melting and low viscosity, consistent with conditions for mid-crust channel flow, proposed previously. Seismic anisotropy, however, shows that crustal flow is determined by the regional patterns of deformation rather than crustal viscosity. Layered anisotropy reveals different deformation within the crust and the asthenosphere, with the dominant deformation pattern in the deep crust similar to that seen at the surface. Low denudation recorded by 10Be in Southern Peninsular India Sanjay Kumar Mandal Maarten Lupker Jean-Pierre Burg Marcus Christl “Geological Institute, ETH Zurich, Switzerland” Poster Abstract: The persistence of high elevation topography observed along many passive margins remains one of the outstanding problems in landscape evolution. In the Southern Peninsular India, this question is marked in the outstanding problem of whether the anomalous topographic relief is in a quasiequilibrium state, decaying slowly through time, or whether the relief has gained during the late Cenozoic. It has long been hypothesized that topography, as well as climate and rock strength, exert first order controls on erosion rates. Here we use detrital cosmogenic 10Be from 43 basins ranging in size from 4 to 68768 km2, to measure millennial basin averaged erosion rates along and across the Western Ghat Mountains in Southern India. The Western Ghat is characterized by W-E gradient in relief and rainfall compared to weak variation in lithology allow us to isolate the relationship between erosion rate and topographic form. Cosmogenic 10Be inventories of modern stream sediment indicate that erosion rates are spatially variable, ranging from ~8 to 77 mm/Ka on the western side and 8 to 51 mm/Ka on the eastern plateau side. The rugged topography of Western Ghats and Nilgiri Mountains of Southern Peninsular India exhibit an alpine-like topography in conjunction with slowest denudation rates. This presents an exception to the often-cited coupling of topography and denudation rates and suggests that in Passive margin settings steep slopes and high relief are not sufficient to record high denudation rates with which they are commonly associated. The differences in denudation rates along and across the Western Ghats is very well correlated with local relief, hence it exerts a first order control that in Passive margin paleo relief influences the topographic development. Although the catchments in Western Ghats receives mean annual precipitation ~ 5 m due to SW monsoon, it records the slow denudation rates. This data suggests that due to the lack of tectonic forcing climate is not sufficient enough to denude the landscape faster in Passive margins. Crustal imaging across the Northern Scandinavian Mountains from seismological and Magnetotelluric data analysis Walid Ben Mansour (1) Richard W. England (1) Max Moorkamp (1) (1)Department of Geology, University of Leicester, University Road Leicester LE1 7RH, UK "Poster (95 cmts * 140 cmts)” Abstract: "The Scandinavian passive margin and craton have been studied in the past by active seismic experiments. These experiments provided the first constraints on the crustal thickness beneath Scandinavia; on the West coast (30-36 km) and beneath the Baltic Shield (44-50 km). However the central part of Scandinavia dominated by Caledonian structure and high topographies (> 2 km) crossing into the Baltic Shield (~ 400-500 m) is poorly understood. In order to understand this topography anomaly (Scandinavian Mountains), a number of passive seismic experiments were deployed first in Southern Scandinavia. These experiments show a thickening of the crust from South-West to North-East in Southern Scandinavia. From 2007, two new seismological networks (SCANLIPS2 and SCANLIPS3D) have been deployed in Northern Scandinavian in order to have a complete view of the lithosphere across the region. At the same time a magnetotelluric array (MaSca project) has been set up in this region in order to image the electric Moho (e-Moho) and electric LAB (e-LAB) in a transition zone between a passive continental margin and a stable Precambrian craton. We use these two kinds of data in order to build a new crustal model across the Northern Scandinavian Mountains. From ZRT receiver function analysis we have a new Moho depth map beneath the Northern Scandinavian Mountains. We will show a new crustal velocity model from ZRT receiver functions and ambient seismic noise analysis. First results for the e-Moho show similarity (Moho depth) with the seismic Moho from ZRT receiver functions and indicate that will be possible to use a joint inversion of Receiver function data and magnetotelluric data for our new crustal model. We will show first results from this technique for the Northern Scandinavian Mountains. Earthquake-induced landslides: Processes, rates and implications O. Marc (1) N. Hovius (1) P. Meunier (2) T. Uchida(3) T. Gorum(4) (1) : German Research Center for Geosciences (GFZ), Telegrafenberg, 14473 Potsdam, Germany. (2) : École Normale Supérieure de Paris, Laboratoire de Géologie, 75231 Paris CEDEX 5, France. (3) : National Institute for Land and Infrastructure Management, Research Center for Disaster Risk Management, 1 Asahi, Tsukuba City,8 Ibaraki Prefecture 305-0804, Japan. (4) : Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation (ITC), University of Twente, PO Box 217, 7500 AE, Enschede, The Netherlands." Abstract: "We present several progress in our understanding of co-seismic and post-seismic landsliding. First, we propose a new physically based relationship predicting the total volume of landslide caused by an earthquake. 12 comprehensive inventories and 18 partially constrained case of earthquake-induced landslides caused mainly by thrust fault earthquakes, but also strike slip and normal fault earthquakes with magnitudes between 5.1 to 7.9 were compared to our prediction. We found that, when normalized for landscape steepness, all but one of our best cases were predicted within a factor of two and about 3/4 of all data are within a factor of 4. The remaining outliers might be caused by lithological variations that are yet to be included in our model. Our data suggest that the 3 principal parameters, moment, depth and landscape steepness are effectively accounted for. As every parameters can be measured or described a-priori for a given earthquake scenario our prediction could have important application both in terms of assessing secondary hazards and in modelling the impact of earthquake-induced landslides in landscape evolution model. Second, we present evidences of a global long term geomorphic response to earthquakes. We documented four cases of persistent elevated landslide rates after Mw6.7 – 7.6 earthquakes. These rates could not be explained by climatic events of aftershocks and recovered exponentially over 1.5 to 4.5 years. We additionally show that, seismometers recorded seismic velocity decrease and exponential recovery over similar period for the shallow layers of the epicentral area. This suggest a damage mechanism could be at the source of both observations and that seismometers could be used to monitor landslide rates after earthquakes that can be another, less recognized, source of hazards." 3D mechanical structure of the lithosphere below the Alps and the role of gravitational body forces in the regional present-day stress field Anna Maria Marotta (1) Raffaele Splendore (1) (1) Università degli Studi di Milano, Department of Earth Sciences “Ardito Desio”, c/o Cicognara 7, 20129 Milano, Italy “Poster” “ Abstract: "The present study aims to investigate how the tectonic compression due to Africa–Eurasia convergence is transmitted up to Central Europe via a thermo-mechanical model, in which a highresolution rheological analysis is performed in the surroundings of the Alpine domain and the predicted heterogeneous lithosphere strength is accounted for to reproduce the surface strain pattern. Our rheological analysis reveals a strongly heterogeneous lithosphere strength that is characterised by steep strength gradients across the Periadriatic Lineament and the occurrence of non-competent crustal layers located below the Northern Alps, where the upper crust controls the total lithosphere strength. When the predicted lithosphere strength is included within a spherical thin sheet model to investigate the propagation of the tectonic compression due to Africa–Eurasia convergence toward Central Europe, our analysis supports the hypothesis that the N–S compressive stress dominates the gravitational body forces in the Southern Alps up to the Periadriatic Lineament. This lineament defines an abrupt transition from the strong mantle belonging to the Adriatic lithosphere to the softer mantle below the Eastern Alps, which is mechanically decoupled from the relatively stronger upper crust, thus preventing stress transmission toward the surface. Thus, in the Eastern Alps, the transmitted S–N compression would remain lower than the E–Wextensional stress induced at crustal levels by the body gravitational forces associated with thick crustal layers. Marotta and Splendore, 2014. Tectonophysics, doi: 10.1016/j.tecto.2014.04.038." Continent-arc collisions: an overlooked factor in explaining North American topography during Jura-Cretaceous times Mitchell G. Mihalynuk (2) K. Sigloch (1) (1) University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom (2) Geological Survey and Resource Development Branch, British Columbia Ministry of Energy and Mines, Victoria, BC, Canada Abstract The viscous drag of lithosphere subducting into the mantle should create dynamic topography at the surface. This includes slabs that have already sunk into the lower mantle – a depth associated with subduction during Mesozoic times. The dynamic topography due to such slabs has been estimated, from observational constraints of gravity anomalies, of seismically imaged slab geometries, and of geological subsidence records. Correct translation of sinking slabs into dynamic topography also depends on the knowledge of paleo-trench locations over time. North America is among the regions that have been scrutinized most closely for tectonic and dynamic topography linked to subduction, because the continent overlies massive piles of lower-mantle slabs. However, Sigloch & Mihalynuk (2013) recently found that Jura-Cretaceous paleo-trench locations for North America seem to be much less certain than generally assumed, even to first order. The widely accepted scenario of “Andean-style”, ocean-beneath-continent subduction since at least 175 Ma does not fit newer geophysical observations of slab geometries and quantitative plate reconstructions. Moreover, Andean-style subduction does not explain why 70% of the North American Cordillera consists of accreted terranes, mainly island arcs. Hence we hypothesized a fundamentally different paleo-geography, and successfully tested it against the data: The seas west of Cretaceous North America must have resembled today’s western Pacific, strung with island arcs. All proto-Pacific plates initially subducted into almost stationary, intra-oceanic trenches, and accumulated below as the massive vertical slab walls imaged today. Above the slabs, long-lived volcanic archipelagos and subduction complexes grew. Crustal accretion occurred when North America overrode the archipelagos, causing major episodes of Cordilleran mountain building. This seems to explain all North American observations, including accreted terranes, but is incompatible with the widely accepted continental Farallon trench since 175+Ma. Hence intraoceanic subduction had gone unrecognized, and thus also a potent mechanism for generating flexural and dynamic topography: continent-arc collision. Unraveling the history the Tethyan (Alpine-Himalayan) margin, that other major accretionary belt of the Mesozoic, is likely hampered by similar “unknown unknowns” about paleo-trench configurations." Accurate imaging of the sub-surface and retrieval of rock properties with joint inversion M. Moorkamp (1) B. Heincke (2) M. Jegen (2) (1) University of Leicester, Department of Geology, Leicester, UK (2) Geomar, Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Sciences, Kiel, Germany" Poster Abstract: Understanding geodynamic processes requires detailed images of the sub-surface and accurate information on the types of rock present. Only then can we obtain meaningful input for geodynamic simulations, relate them to observations of topography and predict its evolution. In recent years, joint inversion of different geophysical datasets has established itself as a method to obtain improved images of the sub-surface compared to individual analyses. Although it is computationally challenging and great care has to be taken to establish an adequate connection between the different types of data, the combination of seismic/seismological data and electromagnetic data in particular has the potential to substantially improve our understanding of sub-surface processes. We will show successful examples of joint inversion in different geological settings, demonstrate the improvement in resolution that we can obtain with joint inversion and show how we can extract additional information such as rock property relationships from the joint inversion results. Investigating tectonic-erosion interactions: a Himalayan case study Y. Najman (1) L Bracciali (1 and 2) R. Parrish (2) I. Millar (2) H. Akhter (3) (1) LEC, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YQ, UK. (2) NIGL, BGS Keyworth, Nottingham, UK (3) Dept of Geology, Dhaka University, Dhaka, Bangladesh." Abstract: Has been proposed that the rapid exhumation and anomalously young metamorphism of the eastern Himalayan syntaxis in the Plio-Pleistocene resulted from river capture of the Yarlung River by the Brahmaputra (the “tectonic aneurysm” model; e.g. Zeitler et al.GSA Today 2001). In order to test this hypothesis, the occurrence of river capture, and its timing, must be ascertained. Today, the Yarlung River flows east along the Indus-Yarlung suture before taking a 180º turn at the eastern Himalayan syntaxis to flow south across the Himalaya as the Brahmaputra. Whether this river pattern results from river capture, or whether the river is antecedent to orogenesis, is much debated. The Yarlung River drains the Jurassic-Paleogene Trans-Himalayan arc of the Asian plate north of the suture and the Tethyan Himalaya of the Indian plate to the south of the suture. The Brahmaputra prior to any capture would have drained the southern Himalayan slopes composed only of Precambrian-Palaeozoic Indian crust, much of which metamorphosed to high grade during the Oligo-Miocene. Hence, the first occurrence of Trans-Himalayan arc detritus which is distinctive of the Yarlung River, in the Neogene palaeo-Brahmaputra deposits in the Bengal Basin, Bangladesh, is key to date the river capture. We have applied a multi-disciplinary provenance study to these sediments and identify the earliest occurrence of detritus from the arc in the Early Miocene. These data allow us to explore the proposed interaction between the snytaxial evolution and the timing of river capture. Given we have now dated the time of this river capture at 18 Ma, the modelled coupling between capture and onset of rapid exhumation (dated <10 Ma) would need to accommodate a lag time of 8 Ma for this hypothesis to hold true and thus we consider the proposed tectonic-erosion untenable. On the evolution of Subduction-Transform Edge Propagators (STEPs): consequences for the Calabrian arc Nicolai Nijholt (1) Rob Govers (1) (1) Department of Earth Sciences, Utrecht University, Netherlands; [email protected] Abstract: Passive margins are first order strength contrasts between ocean and continents, and they may therefore play a critical role in steering the propagation direction of STEPs. Subduction history potentially is also relevant because it is a decisive factor for the forces that drive continued subduction. In this study we explore these factors with mechanical models. Results show that a STEP will follow a passive margin as long as variations in the strike remain within 20 degrees. A change in strike of the passive margin ahead of the STEP of less than 15 degrees results in propagation along the passive margin. If the change in strike of the margin is greater than 15 degrees, the STEP will propagate into the direction that it had before reaching the change in margin strike. Surprisingly, subduction history and strength contrast are less relevant. The results shed light on the evolution of the Calabrian arc after the Miocene: slab rollback towards the ESE was facilitated by a roughly W-E oriented STEP that followed the Africa-Ionian passive margin along the north coast of Sicily. The geology of NE Sicily suggests that this passive margin changed orientation here and was parallel to the present-day Sisifo fault. Given that this corresponds to a moderate orientation change, the active STEP continued to follow the margin. The next orientation change of the passive margin, to the one that is bounded by the Malta Escarpment, was approximately 50 degrees. Based on our model results, we therefore predict that the STEP propagated into the Ionian basin in a direction that was approximately parallel to the Sisifo fault. Interestingly, the predicted location of the present-day STEP fault in the basement at the SW termination of the Calabrian trench appears to correspond with a significant discontinuity within the accretionary wedge." Exploring the topography and time scale in volcanic regions: Numerical and analogue modelling Mehdi Nikkhoo (1) Thomas R.Walter (1) Valerio Acocella (2) (1) Section 2.1: Physics of Earthquakes and Volcanoes, GFZ Potsdam, Germany (2) Dip. Sc. Geologiche, Universita Roma Tre, Rome, Italy “Poster” Abstract: Topography is known as the geometry of the surface features and their corresponding load above a reference datum. These two characteristics of the topography affect the surface deformation as well as the development of volcanic and tectonic processes in different ways. The topographic loads perturb the uppermost stress field of the Earth, which has a major control on the initiation and development of magma pathways and associated faults. The geometry of the topography on the other hand, localizes and controls the stress transfer that promotes the aforementioned effects on the sources and also influences the surface displacements. To include such “topographic effects” in models, we developed a new code based on the boundary element method (BEM), which incorporates the triangular dislocations (TDs) as the basic elements. Utilizing the code, we can simulate surfaces of any 3D complex geometry along with displacement or traction boundary conditions. The modelling code is fast enough to allow simulations based on real observations derived from satellite radar interferometry (InSAR) methods. To infer the volcanic source parameters and also to simulate the observed InSAR surface displacements, we applied the BEM code to well suited case studies: the Lastarria volcano in the Lazufre volcanic region in Chile, the Tendürek volcano in Turkey and Volcán de Colima in Mexico. While in all cases the BEM code allows for multiple interacting sources, the results of the first and the third cases reveal large topographic effects that are due to shallow inferred magma bodies. Analogue models were then developed in order to test and challenge made in the field and by numerical methods, and to explore distinct parameter changes. By injecting dyed-water into a gelatin tank with a defined topography, we examined the effect of the topographic loads on the propagation paths of magma dikes. These analogue models can partly explain the rotation of intrusive fissures as well as off-rift magmatism. Keywords: Topographic effects, Boundary Element Method (BEM), Volcano source Modelling" Controls on deltaic sedimentation in an active rift setting: a source to sink approach from the Sperchios delta, central Greece Sofia Pechlivanidou (1) Patience Cowie (1) Bjarte Hannisdal (1) Rob Gawthorpe (1) (1) Department of Earth Science, University of Bergen, Allégaten, 41, N-5007 Bergen, Norway “Poster” Abstract: This study presents an integrated source to sink approach to assess the Holocene sedimentary record of the Sperchios delta, central Greece. The Sperchios delta has developed as an axial depositional system within an active rift, which is characterized by a half-graben geometry. Detailed sedimentological analysis (grain size, macro/micro faunal, geochemical and mineral magnetic analysis) in conjunction with 14C age constraints reveal the stratigraphic evolution of the area, including the presence of a Holocene transgressive - regressive wedge overlying Late Pleistocene alluvial deposits. The process-based stratigraphic model SedFlux2D is used to simulate the delta evolution and model scenarios are compared with the measured data. A series of sensitivity tests are used to explore uncertainties associated with variations in sediment supply, tectonic subsidence rate, and Holocene relative sea level. We discuss the effects of the major controls, in particular the rate of relative sea-level rise and tectonic subsidence rate, on accommodation creation and thus delta architecture in this active rift setting during the Holocene. The transition from transgression to regression is found to be mainly controlled by the slowing rate of relative sea level rise that occurred approximately 5500 kyrs ago. Finally, we compare the sediment flux estimates derived from the SedFlux2D modelling of the Sperchios delta to the spatial distribution of onshore erosion rates inferred from analysis of the drainage network as well as lithologically controlled variations in erodibility. This comparison, when combined with information on relative uplift/subsidence patterns due to active extensional tectonics, allows us to develop a semi-quantitative source-to-sink model for this area. Isostatic and dynamic support of topography in the Norwegian region V.K. Pedersen R.S. Huismans Department of Earth Science, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway Poster Abstract: Substantial controversy surrounds the recent evolution of high topography along the North Atlantic passive margins. Particularly the origin and age of the Norwegian mountains remain elusive, with suggested formations ranging from Caledonian orogenesis to neogene uplift of a Mesozoic peneplain. In this study we focus on the southern part of the Scandinavian mountains and quantify the relative contributions of crustal isostasy and dynamic topography in controlling the present topography. Crustal isostasy is calculated from a three-dimensional density model we base on recently published seismic data (Stratford et al., 2009) and constrain by gravity modeling. Estimates of dynamic topography have been generated using a global mantle convection model, constrained by seismic and geodynamic observations (Moucha et al., 2008). We find that most of the topography is compensated by the crustal structure, suggesting that the age of the main topography in western Scandinavia is related to the formation of the current crustal structure. A small component of dynamic uplift has however affected the western part of southern Norway rejuvenating existing topography within the last ~ 10 Ma. Stratford et al., 2009. New Moho Map for onshore southern Norway. Geophys. J. Int. 178, 1755– 1765. Moucha, et al., 2008. Dynamic topography and long-term sea-level variations: There is no such thing as a stable continental platform. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 271 (1), 101-108. Probing connections between deep earth and surface Processes in a land-locked ocean basin transformed into a giant saline basin: the Mediterranean DREAM-GOLD project M. Rabineau (1) S. Cloetingh (2) J. Kuroda (3) D. Aslanian (4) A Droxler (5) C. Gorini (6) D. Garcia-Castellanos (7) G. Nolet (8) A. Moscariellio (9) Y. Hello (8) E. Burov (6) F. Sierro (10) F. Lirer (11) F. Roure (12) P.A. Pezard (13) Y. Mart (14) A. Camerlenghi (15) and the GOLD and DREAM Working Groups 1 CNRS, UMR6538, Domaines Océaniques, IUEM, 29280 Plouzané, France 2 Dept. of Earth Sciences, Utrecht University, Budapestlaan 4, 3584CD Utrecht, The Netherlands 3 Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, 2-15 Natsushima-Cho, Yokosuka-city, Kanagawa 237-0061, Japan 4 IFREMER, DRO/GM/LGG, BP 70, 29280 Plouzané, France 5 Department of Earth Science | Rice University MS-126 | 6100 Main Street | Houston, Texas 77005, USA 6 Sorbonne Universités, UPMC, Univ. Paris 06, UMR 7193, Institut des Sciences de la Terre de Paris (iSTeP), F75005, Paris, France 7 Instituto de Ciencias de la Tierra Jaume Almera (ICTJA-CSIC), Solé i Sabarís s/n, 08028 Barcelona, Spain 8 Geoazur, 250, rue Albert Einstein, 06560 Sophia Antipolis, France 9 Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Geneva, Rue des Maraichers 13, CH-1205 Geneva, Switzerland 10 University of Salamanca, Faculty of Science, Plaza de la Merced s/n, 37008 Salamanca, Spain 11 Istituto Ambiente Marino Costiero (IAMC)-CNR Calata Porta di Massa, interno Porto di Napoli 80133, Napoli Italy 12 IFP-Energies Nouvelles, 4 Avenue du Bois Préau, 92852 Rueil-Malmaison 13 Geosciences Montpellier, CNRS, CC60, Univ. Montpellier 2, Pl. Bataillon, 34095, Montpellier, Cedex 5, France 14 Univ. Haifa, Mount Carmel, Haifa 31905, Israel 15 OGS Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e di Geofisica Sperimentale, Borgo Grotta Gigante 42/C, 34010 Sgonico, Trieste, Italy Abstract: "During the last decade, the interaction of deep processes in the lithosphere and mantle with surface processes (erosion, climate, sea-level, subsidence, glacio-isostatic readjustment) has been the subject of intense exploration. The use of a multidisciplinary approach linking geology, geophysics, geodesy, modelling, and geotechnology has lead to the concept of coupled deep and surface processes. Deep earth dynamics (topography, erosion, tectonics) are strongly connected to natural hazards such as earthquakes, landslides, and tsunamis; sedimentary mass transfers have important consequences on isostatic movements and on georesources, geothermal energy repartitions The ability to read and understand the link between deep Earth dynamic and surface processes has therefore important societal impacts. Ground-truth investigations through carefullyselected sites of investigation are strongly required to better understand this coupling. Due to its youth (<30 Ma) and its history of strong subsidence, the almost land-locked Gulf of LionSardinia continental margins system provides a unique record of sedimentary deposition from the Miocene to present. Palaeoclimatic variations, tectonic events, and subsidence history are all recorded there at very high resolution. The late Miocene isolation and desiccation of the Mediterranean, the youngest and most catastrophic event which occurred in the Neogene period, the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC), induced drastic changes in marine environments: widespread deposition of evaporite (gypsum, anhydrite and halite) in the central basin, and intense subaerial erosion along its periphery. These extraordinary mass transfers from land to sea imparted strong isostatic re-adjustments that are archived in the sedimentary record and represents a window to the lithospheric rheology and the deep processes. The GOLD project, part of the DREAM Umbrella proposal focused on the MSC, proposes to explore this unique sedimentary record as well as the nature of the deep crustal structure, providing valuable information about the mechanisms underlying vertical motions in basins and their margins. The Miocene formation and the Pliocene deformation of the Gibraltar Arc System C. R. Ranero (1) E. Gràcia (2) I. Grevemeyer (3) X. Garcia (2) WestMed TopoMed Geomargen-1 Amelie cruises working groups. (1) Barcelona Center for Subsurface Imaging, ICREA at CSIC, CSIC, Barcelona, Spain. (2) Barcelona Center for Subsurface Imaging, CSIC, Barcelona, Spain. (3) GEOMAR | Helmholtz Centre of Ocean Research, Kiel, Germany. Abstract: Four major geological domains form the Gibraltar Arc System (GAS). The GAS is fronted in the Gulf of Cadiz by a large imbricated wedge of tectonically piled rock slices. At the rear side of the structural arc, there are several extensional basins, in the Mediterranean portion of the region. The West Alboran Basin is located overlying Gibraltar stacked units, and the basin sediment infill appears largely unrelated to normal faulting. Ridges and promontories that, where dredged and drilled contain abundant volcanic rocks, characterize the seafloor of the East Alboran Basin. Further east the South Balearic – North Algerian Basin has generally being interpreted as back arc basin. However, the different tectonic elements of the GAS have regionally poorly characterized basement, and their age, evolution and geodynamic origin are highly debated. Part of this uncertainty arises from the scarcity of deep-penetration modern geophysical data in most of the system. The goal of this contribution is to present a summary of results recently produced from models and images from the data collected in 4 recent marine experiments. We present P-wave velocity models across key areas of the system and new reflection images of the tectonic and sediment structures of the crust. Further we present magnetotellutic 3D models of the lithospheric structure. These results are use to interpret the Miocene formation of the GAS and Plio-Pleistocene continent collision that might explain the crustal-lithospheric structure. We conclude that a geodynamic process that is no longer active formed the geological domains of the GAS, and that a new deformation regime -active since about the Pliocene times- is controlling the currently active deformation. A global crustal model from the inversion of GOCE gravity observations M. Reguzzoni(1) D. Sampietro(1,2) (1) DICA - Politecnico di Milano, Milan, Italy (2) GReD s.r.l., Como, Italy Poster Abstract: The boundary between Earth crust and mantle, the so called Moho, is commonly estimated by means of seismic or gravimetric methods. The former methods can be locally very accurate since seismic profiles give an almost direct observation of the actual crustal structure, but can be quite far from reality in large regions where no data are available. The latter methods, although often based on simplified hypotheses to guarantee the uniqueness of the solution, are nowadays becoming more and more important thanks to the improved knowledge of the gravitational field. In particular satellite gravity missions, like the European Space Agency mission GOCE, provide a very accurate and spatially homogeneous dataset that can be used to validate the existing global crustal models or to estimate a new one by constraining the relation between Moho depth and crustal density. In this work the GEMMA1.0 crustal model with a spatial resolution of 0.5°x0.5° and constrained with GOCE observations is presented. For this purpose several additional external information has been used, such as topography, bathymetry and ice sheet models from ETOPO1, a recent 1°x1° sediment global model and some prior hypotheses on crustal density. In particular the main geological provinces, each of them characterized by its own relation between density and depth, have been considered. A model describing lateral density variations of the upper mantle is also taken into account. Starting from this prior information, an inversion algorithm is applied to the GOCE space-wise grid of second radial derivatives of the gravitational potential to estimate the bottom of the crust. The computed Moho global model is well consistent not only with other global/regional models, but also with the actual gravity field, thus overcoming the main limitation of seismic Moho models, like the CRUST1.0. Impact of early inversions and recent lithospheric deformations on erosional surfaces and unroofing in circum-Mediterranean thrust belts and margins F. Roure (1, 2) (1) IFP Energies nouvelles, Geosciences Dpt, Rueil-Malmaison, France (2) Utrecht univ., Tectonic Group, the Netherlands" Abstract: Ealy inversions operating in the North African-Apulian passive margin prior to the Tethyan-Alpine ophiolitic sutures and the final collision stage have lead to local emersion and strong erosion of both platform and basinal series in numerous portions of the foreland, prior to the onset of thrust stacking, tectonic loading and foreland flexure development. Post-collision asthenospheric rise and slab detachments have in turn controlled more recent lithospheric unflexing, resulting in the back-tilting and rapid uplift and erosion of numerous segments of the former flexural basins. Various case studies taken from the Mediterranean will document the effects of these processes, which deviate strongly from the classical models of thrust belt evolution." Accretionary wedge evolution seen as a competition between minimum work and critical taper Tasca Santimano (1) Matthias Rosenau (1) Onno Oncken (1) 1)German Research Center for Geosciences (GFZ), Potsdam, Germany Abstract: "The evolution of accretionary wedges has been described by two theories: The critical taper theory (CTT, Davis et. al., 1983) and the minimum work concept (MWC, Masek & Duncan, 1998). CTT is based on force balance and predicts the ideal shape (critical taper) of an accretionary wedge system. However, the structures that are formed and reactivated to reach the preferred geometry during accretionary wedge growth can be predicted by MWC. This concept states that deformation is accommodated in an energetical way by faults that minimize total (frictional plus gravitational) work. In this study we test the interplay of both concepts and hypothesize that there is a competition between minimizing work and reaching the critical taper that controls the evolution of accretionary wedges. The experimental setup consists of creating a plane strain homogeneous compressional sand wedge with low friction (µ) basal detachment. The evolution of the entire wedge is recorded and analysed by means of the Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV). This allows for a time-series collection of the incremental geometries and internal displacement fields (Dx, Dy) that are used to calculate the gravitational (Wg) and frictional (Wf) work. Observed geometrical evolution and work history are compared to analytical solutions of a self-similarly growing and critically tapered wedge. The analysis shows that shortening and uplift steepens the wedge and therefore causes its departure from the critical state. The latter can only be re-established by forming a new, energetically unfavorable frontal thrust ahead of the wedge tip lowering the taper. Compared to a self-similarly growing wedge that follows the CTT, real accretionary wedges are rarely described as either CTT or MWC. Instead they reflect the competition of reaching criticality and minimum work and are a mixture between a geometrically versus an energetically preferred state. References: Davis, D., Suppe, J., Dahlen, F.A., 1983: Mechanics of Fold-and-Thrust Belts and Accretionary Wedges. Journal of Geophysical Research 88, 1153-1172. Masek, J.G., Duncan, C.C., 1998: Minimum-work mountain building. Journal of Geophysical Research, 103,907-91 Timing and Mode of Landscape Response to Glacial-Interglacial Climate Forcing From Fluvial Fill Terrace Sediments: Humahuaca Basin, E Cordillera, NW Argentina Taylor F. Schildgen (1) Ruth Robinson (2) Sara Savi (1) Bodo Bookhagen (1) Stefanie Tofelde (1) Manfred R. Strecker (1) (1) Institut für Erd- und Umweltwissenschaften, Universität Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany (2) Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of St Andrews, St. Andrews, Scotland UK Poster Abstract: Fluvial fill terraces provide a record of changes in sediment production and/or transport in response to external forcing. The N-S striking Humahuaca intermontane basin parallels the eastern margin of the Puna Plateau and is known for frequent landslides/debris flows during the wet season and protracted past wet periods. Fill terraces along tributaries (20-1100 km2 catchments) to the trunk stream are dated with OSL to between ~30 and 120 ka. Aggradation phases on the west side of the basin correlate with past wet periods, and those on the east side with dry periods. The difference may arise because the river-network geometry of eastern catchments promotes sediment storage, resulting in delayed sediment delivery to the trunk stream and/or a higher threshold to erosion and sediment transport. Cosmogenic nuclide (10Be) concentrations of sand (<0.7 cm) and pebbles (1-3 cm) reveal that in modern stream sediments, (1) denudation rates from sand (<0.1 mm/yr) overlap with bedrock erosion rates, and (2) denudation rates from pebbles are 1.2 to 4x higher, which could reflect the importance of mass movements. From wet-phase terraces, denudation rates are higher than those from modern streams, while highly scattered pebble denudation rates of 0.1-10 mm/yr may reflect an increased frequency of mass movements in past wetter periods. In contrast, dryphase terrace pebble and sand denudation rates overlap with modern rates, 26Al/10Be ratios are low, and a sample from the sediment storage zone has a relatively high pebble denudation rate of 0.3 mm/yr. We interpret the patterns to imply that mass movements are triggered throughout the valley during wet climate phases and induce aggradation, but slow re-excavation of stored sediments from eastern catchments leads to increased 10Be concentrations and delayed sediment delivery to the main valley. Such behavior at an orogen scale could attenuate or mask landscape responses to climate forcing. Deep-Sea Record of Mediterranean Messinian Events (DREAM) multi-phase drilling project. A new challenge for deep sea exploration. Sierro, F. J. (1) Camerlenghi A. (2) Aloisi G. (3) Lofi J. (4) Hübscher C. (5) deLange G. (6) Flecker R. (7) Garcia-Castellanos D. (8) Gorini C. (3) Gvirtzman Z. (9) Krijgsman W. (6) Lugli S. (10) Makowsky Y. (11) Manzi V. (12) McGenity T. (13) Panieri G. (14) Rabineau M. (15) Roveri M. (12) Waldmann N. (11) 1. University of Salamanca 2. OGS, Trieste 3. Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, 4. Université de Montpellier 2, 5. University of Hamburg, 6. Utrecht University, 7. University of Bristol 8. ICTJA-CSIC, Barcelona, 9. Geological Survey of Israel, Jerusalem, 10. University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, 11. University of Haifa, 12. University of Parma, 13. University of Essex, 14. University of Tromsø, 15. CNRS Plouzané Brest. Abstract: Since the discovery of large volumes of salt in the deep Mediterranean DSDP Leg 13 the Messinian salinity crisis has captured the attention of geoscientists from many different disciplines. However, after thousands of publications over the last decades still many questions remain unanswered. The biostratigraphic, magnetostratigraphic and cyclostratigraphic study of marginal basins allowed high resolution correlations throughout the Mediterranean based on the astronomical tuning of rythmic sections. Unfortunately, most of the sedimentary records recovered in marginal basins are not continuous, especially during the latest part of the Messinian, making them not suitable for reconstructing the tectonic, climatic, and biological events that took place in the Mediterranean at that time. In parallel, geophysical research expeditions have provided excellent, high resolution seismic records of deep and intermediate Mediterranean basins pointing to the existence of continuous Messinian successions only in the deepest basins below a thick layer of salt, whereas major erosive surfaces were identified in the present continental margins and the intermediate basins. Only drilling these deep water deposits the scientific community will fully understand the causes, chronology and biological, chemical and tectonic consequences of the MSC. The Mediterraneran salt giant might be a hotspot for the development of a deep biosphere of microbes, living off the association of reduced carbon and sulfate contained in mineral gypsum and anhydrite. The calibration of the vast seismic data from the different Mediterranean basins will shift various paradigms of the early structural evolution of salt giants and their sealing capability. The implementation of riser drilling technologies in the Chikyu vessel would allow to drill these deep Mediterranean sequences, leading a group of scientists to explore and identify locations for multiple-site drilling (including non-riser and riser-drilling) in different environmental settings extending from the intermediate to the deep basins of the Mediterranean Sea. Numerical modelling of terrace staircase formation in the Quaternary drainage system of the southern Pyrenees, Ebro basin, NE Iberia K.M. Stange (1), R.T. van Balen (1), D. Garcia-Castellanos (2) (1) Department of Earth Sciences, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (2) Institute of Earth Sciences Jaume Almera, Spanish National Research Council Abstract: "The southern foreland basin of the Pyrenees (Ebro basin) is an exorheic drainage basin since Late Miocene times. Remnants of an early exorheic Ebro drainage system are not preserved, but morphology provides evidence for the Pliocene–Quaternary drainage development. The incision history of the Ebro system is denoted by (i) extensive pediments associated with the denudation of the southern Pyrenean piedmont around the Pliocene–Quaternary transition, and (ii) deeply entrenched Quaternary river valleys. The Ebro basin pediments indicate a smooth, low-gradient palaeo-topography. In the Middle–Late Pleistocene fluvial incision intensified in the Ebro basin, involving extensive terrace staircase formation. Terrace exposure dating in Ebro tributary rivers indicates climate-triggered terrace staircase formation in response to glacial–interglacial climate cycles in the Pyrenean headwaters. The overall (semi)parallel longitudinal terrace profiles argue for progressive base level lowering for the whole Ebro drainage network. A landscape evolution model, TISC, is used to evaluate climatic, tectonic, and base level scenarios for terrace staircase formation in the Ebro drainage system. Model simulations are compared with morpho-climatic, tectonic, and chronologic data. Results show that climate may trigger terrace formation, but the modelled incision magnitudes and convergent terrace profiles are not consistent with the (semi)parallel terraces in the Ebro basin. A model scenario including rapid (late Pliocene) uplift of the Catalan coastal ranges causes rapid base level lowering and erosion along the Ebro drainage network, small Middle–Late Pleistocene incision magnitudes, and terrace convergence, which are not in agreement with observations. Instead, continuous Quaternary uplift of the Pyrenees and the foreland basins produces (semi)parallel terrace staircases in southern Pyrenean tributary rivers that are consistent with the longitudinal terrace profiles and Middle–Late Pleistocene incision magnitudes observed in the Ebro basin. Forward model simulations indicate that the present Ebro drainage system is actively incising, providing further evidence for uplift. Isostasy, dynamic topography and the elevation of the European Alps P. Sternai (1) T. Becker (2) C. Faccenna (3) S. D. Willett (4) E. Serpelloni (5) M. Miller (2) I . Bianchi (6) L. Jolivet (1) (1) Institut des Sciences de la Terre d'Orléans (ISTO), University of Orléans, Orléans, France; (2) Department of Earth Sciences, University of Southern California (USC), Los Angeles CA, USA; (3) Laboratory of Experimental Tectonics, Università Roma TRE, Roma, Italy; (4) Department of Earth Sciences, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), Zurich, Switzerland; (5) Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV), Centro Nazionale Terremoti, Bologna, Italy; (6) Institute fur Meteorologie und Geophysik, Universitat Wien, Vienna, Austria" Poster Abstract: The shape and elevation of an orogen are the result of isostatic and dynamic contributions, which evolve in space and time depending on the active crustal and mantle processes. We focus on the European Alps and use representative crustal and mantle models to quantify the isostatic and dynamic components of the present-day Alpine topography. We find that the observed elevation of the western and central/eastern Alps is respectively higher and lower than the isostatically compensated topography as estimated from crustal models, suggesting a major contribution to the present-day Alpine topography from the mantle dynamics. The expected mantle flow induced dynamic topography, however, indicates some widespread down welling throughout the orogen, which is consistent with the negative residual topography in the central and eastern Alps but opposite to the positive topographic anomaly in the western Alps. Newly acquired geodetic constraints on the present-day vertical motion provide additional insights on the active processes across the Alps. In particular, measured vertical displacement rates confirm that the Alps are still active, with a complex deformation pattern involving uplift in the western and central Alps and subsidence in the eastern Alps. Since shortening and crustal thickening in the western and central Alps is to date limited, uplift in this sector seems to be best explained by erosional unloading and adjustment to the supposed break-off of the European slab, or a combination of both. The subsidence in the eastern Alps is in contrast with ongoing crustal shortening and thickening, suggesting that a dynamic pull-down arising by the mantle flow provides a substantial contribution to the ongoing vertical motion. How surface processes affect the syn-rift evolution of passive continental margins Susanne J.H. Buiter (1,2) (1) Geological Survey of Norway, Trondheim, Norway ([email protected]) (2) The Centre for Earth Evolution and Dynamics, University of Oslo, Norway. Abstract: Seismic observations of passive margins document surface transport of different amounts of sediments from the onshore to the offshore during the evolution from a continental rift to a post-rift margin. Thick packages of syn-rift basin sediments are found on the Newfoundland and Norwegian margins, whereas West Iberia and the Red Sea are examples of sediment-starved margins. What is the impact of offshore sedimentation and onshore surface erosion on syn-rift margin architecture? Fundamentally, erosion is always a weakening process, whereas sedimentation can be both strengthening and weakening. Erosion reduces the overburden, which induces an isostatic surface uplift, and lowers vertical stress, which reduces pressure-dependent brittle strength. Sedimentation increases brittle strength because of the increase in vertical stress under the extra load. But sediments may have a lower density and cohesion, and therefore a lower brittle strength, than the adjacent crust. Sediments with a low thermal conductivity may also act as a ‘thermal blanket’ preserving heat in the crust below, thereby reducing crustal ductile strength. The feedback effects between surface processes and tectonic deformation during passive margin formation clearly go beyond a simple isostatic response and require careful quantification of the contributing processes in relation to crustal strength evolution. To explore the dynamic feedback relationships between surface processes and crustal strength, I perform a series of numerical experiments on continental extension using the finite-element code SULEC. For a wide range of sediment amounts, a strong lower crust leads to relatively fast lithospheric break-up and a short margin, accompanied by rift flank uplift and focussed mantle upwelling. A weak lower crust delays break-up and may produce a wide, hyper-thin crust. I show that sedimentation may fundamentally alter margin architecture for intermediate strength lower crust by switching break-up style from fast break-up to prolonged rifting with the development of a wide domain of hyper-thin crust. For these model margins, the strengthening effect of sedimentation dominates over its weakening properties." Depth sensitivity of satellite gravity gradients to the lithospheric structure of North America W. Szwillus (1), J. Ebbing (1) (1) Department of geophysics, University of Kiel, Germany “Poster” Abstract: Commonly, lithospheric scale modelling of the gravity field is done primarily by the potential/geoid or vertical gravity acceleration. We examine how satellite gravity gradient data can help to improve the quality of crustal models and to distinguish lithospheric and sub-lithospheric sources. Commonly, the gravity field is divided into lithospheric sub-lithospheric parts by wavelength filtering; e.g. spherical harmonics degrees 2-9 are identified as the sub-lithospheric gravity field. However, the lithosphere contains significant density anomalies that cause a strong gravity effect at these wavelengths. Thus the filtered gravity field is “contaminated” by a considerable crustal effect. An alternative approach is to strip the total field of the contribution of crustal sources by forward calculation. This approach requires a well-defined density model. We are developing such a model for the North American continent, based on the seismological model of the North American Crust (NaCr 14). Additionally we include information from travel time tomography for the velocity and resulting density distribution in the upper mantle. Our first results show that the density contrast at the Moho boundary causes the strongest signal in both the gravity field and the gravity gradients. Gravity gradients have an increased sensitivity to inner-crustal density anomalies, whereas the normal, vertical gravity field better reflects sublithospheric anomalies. Thus, gravity gradients can help to improve the accuracy of crustal density models, which in turn helps to better unveil the sub-lithospheric density structure of the Earth. Thermal, compositional and strength variations of the North American lithosphere M. Tesauro (1, 2) M. K. Kaban (1) W. D. Mooney (3) S. Cloetingh (2) (1) GeoForschungsZentrum Potsdam (GFZ) (2) Department of Earth Sciences, Utrecht University (3) USGS Abstract: Using a regional (NA07) and a global (SL201sv) tomography model and gravity data, we apply an iterative technique, which jointly interprets seismic tomography and gravity data, to estimate temperature and compositional variations in the NA upper mantle. The results obtained demonstrate that temperature of the cratonic mantle is up to 150°C higher than when using a uniform compositional model. The differences between the two tomography models influence the results more strongly than possible changes of the depth distribution of compositional variations. Strong negative compositional density anomalies, corresponding to Mg # >92, characterize the upper mantle of the northwestern part of the Superior craton and the central part of the Slave and Churchill craton. The Proterozoic upper mantle of the western and more deformed part of the NA cratons, appears weakly depleted (Mg# ~91) when NA07 is used, in agreement with the results based on the interpretation of xenolith data. When we use SL2013sv, the same areas are locally characterized by high density bodies, which might be interpreted as the effect due to fragments of subducted slabs, as those close to the suture of the Appalachians and Grenville province. We used the two thermal models to estimate the integrated strength and the effective elastic thickness (Te) of the lithosphere. In the peripheral parts of the cratons, as the Proterozoic Canadian Platform and Grenville, the integrated strength for model NA07 is ten times larger than in model SL2013sv, due to a model-dependent temperature difference of >200˚C in the uppermost mantle. In both models, Proterozoic regions reactivated by Meso-Cenozoic tectonics (e.g., Rocky Mountains and the Mississippi Embayment) show a weak lithosphere due to the absence of the mechanically strong part of the mantle lithospheric layer. Intraplate earthquakes are distributed along the edges of the cratons, characterized by pronounced contrast of strength and Te.