Intschi-Formation

Retour à massif de l'Aar

Représentation et statut

Index
hI
Couleur CMYK
(11%,0%,11%,29%)
Couleur RGB
R: 160 G: 180 B: 160
Rang
Formation lithostratigraphique
Usage
Ce terme est en usage.
Status
terme informel

Nomenclature

Deutsch
Intschi-Formation
Français
Formation d'Intschi
Italiano
Formazione d'Intschi
English
Intschi Formation
Origine du nom

Intschi (UR)

Variantes historiques

Intschi-Zone (Guntli et al. 2016), Maderanertal-Intschi Zone, Intschi Formation (Berger et al. 2017), Intschi-Formation (Gisler 2018)

Âge

Âge au sommet
  • Pennsylvanien tardif
Âge à la base
  • Pennsylvanien tardif

Géographie

Extension géographique
Urner Reusstal und Maderanertal.

Paléogéographie et tectonique

  • Permo-Carbonifère
Paléogéographie
continent européen
Termes génériques

Références

Révision
Berger Alfons, Mercolli Ivan, Herwegh Marco, Gnos Edwin (2017) : Geological Map of the Aar Massif, Tavetsch and Gotthard Nappes. Geological Special Map 1:100'000, Explanatory Notes 129

p.48: More to the east, in the Urner Reusstal and in the Maderanertal, a series of discontinuous outcrops of Carboniferous rocks occurs that was grouped into the Intschi Formation. Lithostratigraphically, these rocks are very similar to the Windgällen and Trift Formations. OBERHÄNSLI et al.(1988) mentioned that at least one mylonitic contact separates the Late Carboniferous rocks from the surrounding units of the polycyclic metamorphic basement.
The Late Carboniferous rocks, assigned in previous literature to the Färnigen Zone, were considered here as the southwestern continuation of the Intschi Formation. The Färnigen Zone of the present map contains strictly only Mesozoic sedimentary rocks (ALB.HEIM & ARN.HEIM 1916) and therefore belongs to the parautochthonous and autochthonous cover. In the Färnigen area, the Late Carboniferous rocks of the Intschi Formation define the boundary between two blocks of polycyclic metamorphic basement: the Erstfeld Zone in the northwest and the Sustenhorn Zone in the southeast. East of the Intschialp, the Intschi Formation no longer delimits two different zones but is wedged into the Sustenhorn Zone. This geometrical change is most probably due to the interference of Variscan and Alpine thrust faults.

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