Late Middle Pleistocene Tectonic Inversion in the Mazarron Graben (Betic
Cordillera, SE Iberia)
Abstract
The Carrascoy and Palomares faults are two major active faults of the
Eastern Betic Shear Zone (SE Iberia), both controlling conspicuous
mountain fronts. However, the area in between both faults, corresponding
to the Mazarron Graben (MG), is a nearly flat plain bounded by a relief
of smooth hills whose tectonic origin and evolution remains uncertain.
By means of a morphotectonic analysis, geophysical survey and
paleoseismological trenching we point out that this is area of
distributed deformation controlled by folds of variable amplitude
nucleated in high angle reverse faults with sinistral component without
a well-defined deformation front. The MG developed a marine basin during
the Upper Miocene evolving into an alluvial environment with calcrete
pedogenic development through the Pleistocene, which formed a tableland
landscape that favors the identification of tectonic structures. In this
study we demonstrate how some of the ancient normal faults controlling
the graben were reactivated as reverse during the late Middle
Pleistocene within a regional frame of positive tectonic inversion. Such
inversion is evidenced by several emblematic structures: (i) presence of
harpoon folding, and (ii) newly formed high angle reverse faults, which
dips increase and ruptures become younger backwards on the
hanging wall. Based on the timing of the observed deformation, we also
suggest that the onset of the regional tectonic inversion might be
related to the tectonic evolution of the neighboring Carrascoy and
Palomares faults, producing a local stress tensor varying dramatically
from extension to compression within the neotectonic period in a
regional convergence tectonic frame.