Overview of the Engadin window and the surrounding austroalpine units.

The Engadin window or (Lower Engadin window) is a tectonic window that exposes penninic units lying below the austroalpine units in the alpine nappe stack. It has a roughly elliptical shape with the long axis striking northwest–southeast and dimensions of 55 x 17 km.[1]

From a geographic perspective the window stretches from Zernez (Graubünden, Switzerland) to Landeck (Tirol, Austria), or the Lower Engadin.

Overview

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The rocks cropping out in the Engadin window are weakly metamorphosed sediments of middle Jurassic to Eocene age. Most of them are interpreted as deposits from turbidites.[2] They are seen as part of the penninic units similar to the rocks that make up large portions of the Switzerland. Furthermore, the sediments are attributed to the Valais ocean, the Briançonnais microcontinent, and the Piemont-Liguria Ocean.[1] The metamorphic overprint was caused by the closure of the Valais and the Piemont-Liguria during the Paleogene part of the Alpine orogeny. The rocks experienced low-temperature-high-pressure overprint which reached the blueschist facies.[3]

On geologic maps the Engadine window has an onion shell appearance. From outside to inside, or from highest to lowest in the nappe stack, the following units are distinguished:

  • Fimber zone (including Arosa zone)
  • Tasna zone
  • Champatsch zone
  • Pfundser zone

Other tectonic windows

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The Engadin window is not the only place where penninic units are exposed within the austroalpine. The Tauern window is the largest one and lies east of the Engadin window. The Gargellen window in Vorarlberg is the smallest one. The Rechnitzer window is the easternmost tectonic window.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Schmid, Stefan M.; Fügenschuh, Bernhard; Kissling, Eduard; Schuster, Ralf (30 April 2004). "Tectonic map and overall architecture of the Alpine orogen". Eclogae Geologicae Helvetiae. 97 (1): 93–117. Bibcode:2004SwJG...97...93S. doi:10.1007/s00015-004-1113-x.
  2. ^ Waibel, A.F.; Frisch, W. (30 April 1989). "The Lower Engadine Window: sediment deposition and accretion in relation to the plate-tectonic evolution of the Eastern Alps". Tectonophysics. 162 (3–4): 229–241. Bibcode:1989Tectp.162..229W. doi:10.1016/0040-1951(89)90246-1.
  3. ^ Bousquet, Romain. "Metamorphic structure of the Alps - Revised version". Archived from the original on 7 June 2015. Retrieved 23 February 2013.

46°58′15″N 10°23′15″E / 46.97083°N 10.38750°E / 46.97083; 10.38750

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Engadin

The Engadin or Engadine (Romansh: Engiadina [eɲdʑɐˈdiːnɐ] ; German: Engadin [ˈɛŋɡadiːn] or [ɛŋɡaˈdiːn] ; Italian: Engadina; French: Engadine) is a long

Hohe Tauern window

nappes. The smaller Engadin window in western Austria/Switzerland, the Gargellen window [de] in Vorarlberg and the Rechnitzer window in the Kőszeg Mountains

Eastern Alps

and several crystalline rocks in geological windows, such as the Engadin window and the Hohe Tauern window in the Central Alps. The East Alpine system:

Tristel Formation

Rhenodanubic Group. Outcrops can be found in the Engadin window, the Tauern window, the Rechnitz window [de], and many localities of the Penninic realm

Aroley Formation

the Tristel Formation found in eastern Switzerland, the Engadin window and the Tauern window. Loprieno, Andrea. "earth.unibas.ch/tecto/research/Diss_Loprieno_2001_small

Valais Ocean

basalt, pillow lava). The windows in the overlying Austroalpine nappes reveal the underlying Penninic nappes. In the Engadin window, remnants are found in

Austroalpine nappes

except for some tectonic windows such as the Tauern window, the Rechnitz window (both in Austria) and the Engadin window (Switzerland). They cover eastern

Tarasp Castle

Switzerland, near the former municipality of Tarasp (now Scuol), in Lower Engadin, Graubünden. It is a Swiss heritage site of national significance. Tarasp