Periadriatic Seam
The Periadriatic Seam (or fault) is a distinct geologic fault in Southern Europe, running S-shaped about 1,000 km (621 mi) from the Tyrrhenian Sea through the whole Southern Alps as far as Hungary. It forms the division between the Adriatic plate and the European plate.[1]
Geology of the Alps |
---|
Tectonic subdivision |
Formation & rocks |
Geological structures |
Paleogeographic terminology |
Geology portal |
Tectonics and geology
Within the Eastern Alps, the line marks the border between the Central Eastern Alps and the Southern Limestone Alps. In the Western Alps it forms the division between the southern Apulian foreland and the central crystalline zones of the Alps.
Continental collision is still going on, with the Apulian and European plates still converging. The central zones of the Alps are rising too, causing vertical slip along the fault. The result is the set of major fault zones collectively named Periadriatic Seam. Movement along the Periadriatic Seam is the cause for the earthquake zone between Vienna and Friuli. The last destructive earthquake happened in Friuli in 1976.
The uplift caused violent erosion of the young orogen, which led to the formation of the Hohe Tauern window. At several regions a heavy uplift of the Central Alps by some kilometers took place, and also a shift of more than 50 km.
Geographic position and names
From east to west, the course of the Periadriatic Seam and the names given to it regionally are as follows:
- Drau line: Pannonian Basin – Pohorje – Karawanks – Drau valley (Jauntal, Rosental) – Rosegg
- Gailtal line: Villach – Gail valley – Kartitsch
- Pustertal line: Sillian – Puster Valley – Bruneck
- Giudicárie line: Meran – Val di Sole
- Tonale or Insubric line: Tonale Pass – Val Camonica – Valtellina – Biella.
See also
- Adriatic Plate, also known as Apulian Plate – A small tectonic plate in the Mediterranean
- Engadine Line – Strike-slip Fault in Switzerland, Italy and Austria
- Geology of the Alps – The formation and structure of the European Alps
References
- McCann, Tom (2008). The Geology of Central Europe: Mesozoic and Cenozoic Volume 2 of The Geology of Central Europe. Geological Society. p. 1414. ISBN 978-1-86239-265-6.