The opening of the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea, and the collision of the Arabian plate with the jigsaw southern margin of the Anatolian plate have sheared the Sinai-Levant microplate off the NW part of the Arabian plate, and created the left-lateral Dead Sea (Levant) transform fault. The structural setting of the northern Levant region, particularly Lebanon and the Palmyrides, has been complicated by detachments along incompetent evaporitic horizons, roughly separating the post-Triassic succession from the underlying crustal material. The interpretation of the multiple source Werner deconvolution (MSWD) estimates of Bouguer gravity profiles, which were separately calculated for Syria and Lebanon, integrated with the available geological and geophysical results leads to the following interpretations: (1) the crust of Syria thickens southeastwards from approximately 32 km under the Al-Ghab Graben to > 36 km under the Aleppo high, the Palmyride fold belt and the Rutbah high; (2) the lower-crustal (basaltic) layer thickens northwestwards from the hinterland to the Al-Ghab graben at the expense of the overlying andesitic layer; (3) the Mid-Beqa'a fault is delineated by the MSWD estimates in Lebanon and its NE extension in Syria; (4) the Phanerozoic section in the southwesternmost parts of the Palmyrides is ∼ 13 km thick, and the shortening there could exceed 30 km; (5) the Palmyride fold belt, and the Serghaya and Mid-Beqa'a faults could have accounted for about 70 km of the 105 km left-lateral displacement along the southern segment of the Dead Sea transform fault system, without transmission to the Syrian (northern) segment of the fault system; (6) the splitting of the Dead Sea transform fault in the Huleh Depression into the Serghaya, Mid-Beqa'a, Yammouneh and Roum faults could be explained by the rotation of the detached post-Triassic succession over a stable deep left-lateral fracture of the Dead Sea fault in the underlying crustal material.
CITATION STYLE
Khair, K., Tsokas, G. N., & Sawaf, T. (1997). Crustal structure of the northern Levant region: Multiple source Werner deconvolution estimates for Bouguer gravity anomalies. Geophysical Journal International, 128(3), 605–616. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-246X.1997.tb05322.x
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