This study investigates the volcano–sedimentary processes that occurred in an oceanic branch of the Western Tethys, now part of the Gimigliano–Monte-Reventino metaophiolite Unit, exposed at the southeastern termination of the Sila Piccola Massif, within the northern sector of the Calabria–Peloritani terrane (Calabria, southern Italy). Fieldwork, petrography, and mineralogical analyses on the Gimigliano metaophiolite succession have identified five distinct volcano–sedimentary lithofacies. These lithofacies are characterized by mineral assemblages of epidote, chlorite, quartz, and albite, with minor amounts of muscovite and calcite, resulting from high-pressure–low-temperature (HP-LT) metamorphism followed by low-grade greenschist metamorphism of mid-oceanic ridge basalt (MORB)-type volcanic products. Based on their stratigraphic and textural features, these lithofacies have been interpreted as metabasaltic flow layers emplaced during effusive volcanic eruptions and metahyaloclastic and metavolcaniclastic deposits formed by explosion-driven processes. This lithofacies assemblage suggests that the Gimigliano area likely represented an oceanic sector with high rates of magmatic outflows, where interactions between magma and water facilitated explosive activity and the dispersion of primary volcaniclastic deposits, mainly from the water column, in addition to the emplacement of basaltic lava flow. In contrast, other metaophiolite complexes in the Calabria region, characterized by the presence of pillow basalts, were areas with low effusive rates. The coexistence of these differences, along with the extensive presence of metaultramafites, portrays the Calabrian branch of the Tethys as a slow-spreading oceanic ridge where variations in surficial volcanic processes were controlled by differences in the effusion rates across its structure. This study is a valuable example of how a volcano–sedimentary approach to reconstructing the emplacement mechanisms of metaophiolite successions can provide geodynamic insights into ancient oceanic ridges.
Volcano–Sedimentary Processes on an Ancient Oceanic Seafloor: Insights from the Gimigliano Metaophiolite Succession (Calabria, Southern Italy)
Barilaro, Federica
;Di Capua, Andrea
;Cianflone, Giuseppe;Turano, Giovanni;Robertelli, Gianluca;Brutto, Fabrizio;Ciccone, Giuseppe;Foti, Alessandro;Festa, Vincenzo;Dominici, Rocco
2025-01-01
Abstract
This study investigates the volcano–sedimentary processes that occurred in an oceanic branch of the Western Tethys, now part of the Gimigliano–Monte-Reventino metaophiolite Unit, exposed at the southeastern termination of the Sila Piccola Massif, within the northern sector of the Calabria–Peloritani terrane (Calabria, southern Italy). Fieldwork, petrography, and mineralogical analyses on the Gimigliano metaophiolite succession have identified five distinct volcano–sedimentary lithofacies. These lithofacies are characterized by mineral assemblages of epidote, chlorite, quartz, and albite, with minor amounts of muscovite and calcite, resulting from high-pressure–low-temperature (HP-LT) metamorphism followed by low-grade greenschist metamorphism of mid-oceanic ridge basalt (MORB)-type volcanic products. Based on their stratigraphic and textural features, these lithofacies have been interpreted as metabasaltic flow layers emplaced during effusive volcanic eruptions and metahyaloclastic and metavolcaniclastic deposits formed by explosion-driven processes. This lithofacies assemblage suggests that the Gimigliano area likely represented an oceanic sector with high rates of magmatic outflows, where interactions between magma and water facilitated explosive activity and the dispersion of primary volcaniclastic deposits, mainly from the water column, in addition to the emplacement of basaltic lava flow. In contrast, other metaophiolite complexes in the Calabria region, characterized by the presence of pillow basalts, were areas with low effusive rates. The coexistence of these differences, along with the extensive presence of metaultramafites, portrays the Calabrian branch of the Tethys as a slow-spreading oceanic ridge where variations in surficial volcanic processes were controlled by differences in the effusion rates across its structure. This study is a valuable example of how a volcano–sedimentary approach to reconstructing the emplacement mechanisms of metaophiolite successions can provide geodynamic insights into ancient oceanic ridges.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


