The Greater Caucasus is Europe's highest mountain belt and results from the inversion of the Greater Caucasus back-arc-type basin due to the collision of Arabia and Eurasia. The orogenic processes that led to the present mountain chain started in the Early Cenozoic, accelerated during the Plio-Pleistocene, and are still active as shown from...
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2010 (v1)Book sectionUploaded on: December 3, 2022
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April 13, 2009 (v1)Conference paper
International audience
Uploaded on: December 3, 2022 -
October 5, 2009 (v1)Conference paper
International audience
Uploaded on: December 3, 2022 -
2010 (v1)Book section
In the Lesser Caucasus three main domains are distinguished from SW to NE: (1) the autochthonous South Armenian Block (SAB), a Gondwana-derived terrane; (2) the ophiolitic Sevan–Akera suture zone; and (3) the Eurasian plate. Based on our field work, new stratigraphical, petrological, geochemical and geochronological data combined with previous...
Uploaded on: December 3, 2022 -
January 2016 (v1)Journal article
We report new observations in the eastern Black Sea-Caucasus region that allow reconstructing the evolution of the Neotethys in the Cretaceous. At that time, the Neotethys oceanic plate was subducting northward below the continental Eurasia plate. Based on the analysis of the obducted ophiolites that crop out throughout Lesser Caucasus and East...
Uploaded on: February 28, 2023