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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @island arc 1 (1992), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1440-1738
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract The Palaeo-Tethyan suture separates regions characterized by two fundamentally different tectonic styles in the structure of the Tethysides. North of the suture in Iran, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Tadjikistan, Kirgizstan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and large parts of the Russian Federation and China, orogenic development is characterized by very large subduction-accretion complexes developed since the late Proterozoic. Magmatic arc axes migrated radially outwards from the ‘Old Vertex of Eurasia’ and consolidated the accretionary prisms into a ‘basement complex’ dominated by a pelitic composition. In such orogens, called the ‘Turkic-type’ after the dominant ethnic population of Central Asia, ophiolites are unreliable indicators of sutures, because they are present throughout the ‘basement’ as in-faulted shreds and rarely as nappes. By contrast, south of the Palaeo-Tethyan suture, orogeny was commonly characterized by a Sumatra- or Andean-type continental margin arc (e.g. the Transhimalaya arc) that in places became an island arc by back-arc basin rifting (e.g. the Black Sea behind the Rhodope-Pontide fragment) and later collided with an Atlantic- (as in the Himalaya) or California-type (as in the Alps) continental margin to create Alpine- or Himalayan-type orogenic belts. Turkic-type orogenic belts result from the exaggeration of the Himalayan-type as a result of the subduction of very large oceanic areas that contain great amounts of sediment. They contribute to the enlargement and also possibly the growth of the continental crust which has a composition more silicic than basalt. The Palaeo-Tethyan suture is thus a line across which the rate of continental enlargement by subduction-accretion changed dramatically.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Geophysical journal international 102 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-246X
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Palaeomagnetic data on Eocene rocks from within the ‘Almacik Flake’, bounded by two strands of the North Anatolian right-lateral fault indicate that the flake has undergone an apparent counterclockwise rotation of about 148° on average. We interpret this as a real 212° clockwise rotation, because the Almacik flake is entirely delimited by the right-lateral North Anatolian Fault strands, the only dominant post-Eocene structure in the area, and because areas surrounding the flake do not show the same rotation. This rotation must have occurred since the North Anatolian Fault originated in the late medial Miocene (late Serravallian: 11.5 Ma) and, if so, may imply either a larger total slip along it than hitherto estimated or that the Almacik flake is the surface expression of a flower structure rotating above a shear zone narrower than the present width of the flake.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
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    Geological Society of America (GSA)
    In: GSA Today
    Publication Date: 2014-11-27
    Description: December 2014 GSA Today Featured Article GROUNDWORK p. 4 How scientometry is killing science A.M. Celal Sengör Abstract | Full Text | PDF (4MB) ABSTRACT “ Publish or perish” is making science perish. When I was a student, one of my professors once said that the quality of a field geologist is assessed through gossip. When I asked him what he meant by it, he responded by pointing out that unlike in laboratory work or purely theoretical endeavors, a field geologist’s work was difficult to impossible to replicate and therefore to check. One therefore relied on the opinion of those people who were closely associated with that work through similar interest or actual collaboration or simply close acquaintanceship with the author, since publication in a reputable journal does not always guarantee high-quality work. When one needed evaluation of a certain geologist’s work, one asked those people’s opinion who were familiar with it.
    Print ISSN: 1052-5173
    Topics: Geosciences
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