Open Access
Review
Issue
BSGF - Earth Sci. Bull.
Volume 196, 2025
Article Number 4
Number of page(s) 18
DOI https://doi.org/10.1051/bsgf/2025002
Published online 01 April 2025

© C. Crouzet et al., Published by EDP Sciences 2025

Licence Creative CommonsThis is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

1 Introduction

Since the precursory speculative view of Gidon (1974) who compared the shape of the western Alps to an atmospheric depression, it has been recognized that the kinematic history of the belt cannot be accounted for without significant rotations (Vialon et al., 1989; Collombet et al., 2002). As shown by numerous studies (Satolli et al., 2005; Weil et al., 2010; Pueyo et al., 2016) palaeomagnetism is a powerful tool to determine possible block rotations around vertical axis.

In the Alps, continental mobility has been evidenced since the end of the XIXth century (Heim, 1878; Argand, 1916). The arcuate shape of the western Alps (i.e. between latitude and longitude of 43–47 N and 4-10E respectively) is classically considered to be the consequence of oblique collision of the Apulian indentor associated with left lateral escape of the different units involved in the crustal collision process (Goguel, 1963; Tapponnier, 1978; Rosenbaum and Lister, 2005). The rotations may also affect the Apulian indentor as a whole and several geodynamic models have been proposed to take into account such rotations (see Schmid and Kissling, 2000; Ford et al., 2006; van Hinsbergen et al., 2020). In particular, the precursory study of Ménard (1988), based on a kinematic interpretation of the periadriatic lineament (that are composed from west to east by the Canavese, Insubrian, Judicaria and Gail lines) displaced with respect to its deep trace inducing, by flexure, the northern Po plain, proposed a two phases rotation scheme of the Austroalpine and Southern Alps basements dragging the underlying upper Penninic crust: 18 degrees during the Oligocene and 27 degrees in the Miocene. Such rotations can be tested using appropriate paleomagnetic data.

Many paleomagnetic works have been performed in the Western Alps since Roche (1957) and the review of the first thirty years of paleomagnetic investigations (Heller et al., 1989). Published paleomagnetic data until now came up with contradictory conclusions. In fact, since Heller et al. (1989) no general review has been performed. A recent compilation is presented in Brunsmann (2023) without critical assessment on the data significance. Our aim is to offer a clear synthesis, adding data published since, or not used by Heller et al. (1989), and restraining the analysis to post middle Eocene (40 Ma) data. This work focuses only on the Western Alps and readers should refer to papers such as Thöny et al. (2006) for central and eastern Alps, Maffione et al. (2008) for North Apennine, Siravo et al., (2023) for Corsica − Sardinia and Cifelli and Mattei (2010) for the Italian peninsula.

Sorting the data to only post middle Eocene has several essential advantages:

1) the debate on whether European or Africa referenced directions have to be used is pointless as suturing of both continental crusts have already begun between 50 and 35 Ma (Schmid and Kissling, 2000; Schmid and Kissling, 2000; Carrapa et al., 2003); therefore the kinematic analysis can be based only on relative movements with respect to stable Europe.

2) the apparent polar wander paths (APWP) of stable Europe and Africa are very similar since ca 40 Ma (Torsvik et al. (2012)). Moreover, the European APWP is much better defined than the African one, allowing to resolve rotations less than 10 degrees (see below).

3) the stability of reference declination and inclination from the Eocene to the Miocene, allows to use data poorly constrained in age like remagnetizations, left apart by Heller et al. (1989).

4) the observed post middle Eocene block rotations can be safely related to Alpine movements while older data may have recorded successive independent rotations linked to (1) the Liassic basin opening, (2) hypothetical pre-alpine phases of deformations (Cretaceous and Eocene phases, Pyrénéo-provençal phase, …), or even (3) late Hercynian tectonic activity for the Permian data (e.g. Henry, 1992).

Regardless of the age of magnetization, the classical use of tilt correction (bedding correction) implies that the full kinematic of the folding is well known (geometry, fold axis …). Since it is rarely the case, it can lead to inadequate tectonic corrections (Cairanne et al., 2002). In mountains belts, several successive phases of deformation usually occurred, often combining unknown successive axis of rotation, which add another source of uncertainty. Therefore, primary paleomagnetic directions in fold and thrust belts should be used with caution (Pueyo et al., 2016).

Overprinted secondary magnetization without paleohorizontal has always the problem of unknown tilt (i.e. rotation around horizontal axes), possibly yielding artefact rotation values. As a consequence, Tertiary post folding remagnetizations appear as a better tool to constrain late stages of Alpine tectonic deformations than pre-Tertiary primary magnetization. Nevertheless, in this work we will also consider Tertiary primary data.

2 Treatment process and data selection

The paleomagnetic database used here is provided in Table 1. Each entry of the database is called by a number in square brackets that allow easy exchange between table, text and figures. This synthesis will be restricted to the Western Alps and its foreland (i.e. to the latitude and longitude rectangle 43–47 N and 4-10E). The few data from Corsica- North Sardinia block are also used in order to strengthen the discussion. Data from Middle to Upper Eocene from South Sardinia (Siravo et al., 2023) are not included in this discussion because they have suffered an extra ∼ 30° CCW rotation prior to 21 Ma during the Liguro-provençal rifting. The limited size of the studied zone allows to base the discussion on directions rather than poles. Table 2 gives the expected declinations and inclinations (D, I) with the associated confidence cone (α95), at the center of our zone (45N and 7E) from 50 to 0 Ma, calculated according to Besse and Courtillot (2002), Schettino and Scotese (2005) and Torsvik et al., (2012). The difference in calculated expected declination is less than 5°. This value is usually below the confidence cone, therefore using either of the references is not limiting in view of the uncertainties. Using Torsvik et al., (2012), the angular deviation of directions is about 3° since 50 Ma. Thus, the magnetization’s age is not critical for an attempt to retrieve small rotations. The different site positions in the selected area imply a maximum of 0.6 degrees of deviation compared to the predicted directions at its centre for an age of 30 Ma. This deviation is negligible compared to the uncertainty of the pole position (see Tab. 2).

In Table 1, the entries are sorted in four categories. Category I corresponds to primary directions with paleohorizontal. It includes mostly Tertiary sediments (3 out of 21 entries are from volcanics). Category II corresponds to secondary directions with paleohorizontal. It groups mainly pre-folding remagnetizations in sedimentary cover. Category III corresponds to primary directions without paleohorizontal. It includes mainly tertiary intrusive rocks. Category IV corresponds to secondary directions without paleohorizontal. It groups mainly metamorphic rocks, even if in some cases the bedding can be retrieved, as the folding may predate magnetization.

Each data is associated to the classical parameters (Fisher, 1953; Demarest, 1983): site number N (or sample number: n if only one site), declination: D, inclination: I, confidence angle: α95, predicted rotation (R) and associated error (dR), and age of the used pole (age-R). These rotations are represented at their site location on Figure 1 using a simple qualitative representation according to the nature of remanence. The uncertainty (dR) is indicated by a pie slice with an opening equal to two dR.

In a collision zone, the rigid body plate tectonics scheme should be taken with care, so that the map of paleomagnetic rotations (Fig. 1) must not be interpreted in a rigid way. Several studies show large variations of block rotations within the same formation due to differential transport of thrusted units (e.g., Muttoni et al., 2000). As our aim is to delineate regional block rotations we provide regional mean direction by averaging at least 4 localities when available. This calculation is performed mainly using the regional structural pattern and the type of study (i.e. mostly one study = one reference even if several sites are described). We used also magnetostratigraphic studies, based on one or two sections, and some regional means with limited number of localities (N<4) to strengthen our demonstration.

Two criteria have been used to categorize the dataset: (1) primary or secondary magnetizations, both combined with (2) the knowledge of a paleohorizontal at the time of magnetization is referenced or not. Then four categories (labelled I to IV, see Tab. 1) are defined. Category I is the ideal one as it contains primary magnetization with bedding attitude, which in principle concerns sedimentary and volcanic studies. However, the number of flows necessary to average out paleosecular variation (PSV), several tens at least (see Rochette et al., 1993 where 30 sites still do not average PSV), is never achieved in the studied area. Therefore, the scarce available volcanic data is discarded in our analysis, except the volcanic data from Northern Sardinia), synthesized by Muttoni et al. (1998) or the extensive work of Gattacceca et al. (2007), entries [14] and [16] respectively in Table 1. The category II contains mainly remagnetizations in sedimentary fold and thrust belts. In this case, the fold test is a crucial tool and often not well documented in publications. For primary magnetization in intrusives (category III) and secondary magnetization without paleohorizontal (category IV), the lack of a paleohorizontal reference let open discussion on tectonic interpretations (i.e. vertical axis rotation or tilting around a horizontal axis) as it is always possible to find a tilt value and axis that fits the reference and observed directions (e.g., in the Alps: Heller, 1980 [45]; Lamarche et al., 1988 [48]; Ménard and Rochette, 1992 [47], Crouzet et al., 1996 [48], Rosenberg and Heller, 1997, Cairanne et al., 2002; Dumont et al., 2008 [48]). However, coherent tilt on a large horizontal extension is not so easy to explain as it would imply very large uplift or subsidence. Therefore, such data, if regionally coherent, cannot be dismissed.

The compiled database is detailed and discussed below, separating a) the European cover including the Subalpine massifs and the external crystalline massifs, west of the Penninic front; b) the internal Alpine units (Penninic and Austro-Alpine) plus the Piemonte basin and, c) the N Apennine and Corsica-North Sardinia sites.

Table 1

Paleomagnetic database used in the discussion. N: number of sites used, n: number of samples. D: declination, I: Inclination, α95: 95% confidence cone, K: precision parameter, R: predicted rotation, dR: error on the rotation (calculated after Demarest, 1983). The rotation and its error are calculated taking into account the age of magnetization and the corresponding Torsvik et al. (2012) synthetic APWP reference. (a): combination of data from Crouzet et al., 1996; Dumont et al., 2008; Ménard et Rochette, 1992 and Lamarche et al., 1988.

Table 2

Predicted directions at 45N and 7E for stable Europe versus time. A: Synthetic APWP (Besse and Courtillot, 2002), B: APWP results from post-filtering process and spline regression analysis (Schettino and Scotese, 2005) and C: APWP from Torsvik et al. (2012)).

thumbnail Fig. 1

Synthetic structural map of the Western Alps. Major thrust and strike slip faults are indicated, with the Pennicic frontal thrust (PFT) highlighted in bold (after Vialon et al., 1989). Tertiary paleomagnetic rotations versus north are represented according to the code described in the insert. Uncertainty is shown as a pie slice. Number corresponds to the entry in Table 1. A: Argentera Massif, AR: Aar Massif, B: Belledonne crystalline Massif, BZ: Briançonnais zone, DB: Dent Blanche Massif, DH: Delphino-helvetic zone, DM: Dora Maira Massif, L: Lepontine Massif, MoB: Molasse basin, MB: Mont Blanc Massif, PL: Peri-adriatic Line, PN: Prealps Nappes, PZ: Piemontaise zone, PFT: Penninic frontal Thrust, V: Vanoise Massif.

3 European platform and external units

3.1 Tertiary sediments

Successful studies of Tertiary sediments are quite scarce. Kempf et al. (1998), as a by-product of extensive magnetostratigraphic work in the Oligo-Miocene Molasse sequence reported a small (12.4 ± 5.0°) although significant clockwise (CW) rotation of the Swiss Molasse basin [1]. In the southern part of the molasse basin, a seemingly contradictory counterclockwise (CCW) rotation (−12.8 ± 9.1°) is observed by Burbank et al. (1992) [2]. As Burbank et al.’s magnetostratigraphic study is only based on two sites, this CCW rotation may be related to local effects linked to the Vuache fault. The retrodeformation and displacement field of Affolter and Gratier (2004) performed using surface-balanced model, suggest counterclockwise rigid rotations up to 30° in the southern Internal Jura and a 10° clockwise, vertical axis rotation of the molasse basin in Switzerland. These predicted rotations are broadly consistent with those documented by paleomagnetic data. The observed paleomagnetic rotations may result from a substantial decrease in shortening at the southern Jura end, which would only reflect the deformation of detached cover.

Few sites were collected by Cardello et al. (2015) in Tertiary formations from the Helvetic nappes of Switzerland. As the Characteristic Remanent Magnetization (ChRM) is pre, syn or post folding, results are difficult to interpret. They represent more probably mainly local deformation linked to the Rawill depression structuration rather than a regional block rotation significance. These results are not reported in our database.

Two sites collected in Priabonian marls of the Arc de Nice massif have preserved a primary (or at less a pre-folding) remanence (Sonnette, 2012 [6]). It provides an important CW rotation of 42.0±4.4°. This important value probably reflects local effects during the polyphased deformation (Laurent et al., 2000) and salt tectonic activity (Brooke-Barnett et al., 2020; Célini et al., 2020).

Other available data from Provence concern the lower Paleocene with a 5 to 9° insignificant clockwise rotation (Westphal and Durand, 1989; Cojan et al., 2000) [3–4] and the Oligocene with −16.5 ± 6.0° CCW rotation (Kechra et al., 2003) [5]. Several assumptions may explain those contradictory results. (1): To explain the two previous results we have to imagine 23.5±8.0° CW rotation before Oligocene time and 16.5±6.0° CCW rotation since the Oligocene. (2) Unsuspected important small scale (kilometric) rotations may affect some provençal data. While this is out of the scope of the present review, it is noticeable that the Late Cretaceous dinosaur site from Villeveyrac-Mèze Basin (Languedoc area) shows a significant vertical axis CCW rotation of about 15.1° ± 8.3° with respect to the expected Late Cretaceous direction (Benammi et al., 2006). This suggests that local block rotation is possible.

The special case of the so-called “ultra-Helvetic flysch” [7, 8] (Piquet et al., 2000) will be discussed with the internal units because it comes from the Penninic klippen tectonically emplaced on the top of the Subalpine massifs.

3.2 Tertiary intrusive

The Esterel massif is mainly constituted of late Carboniferous and Permian rocks in which the only tertiary intrusive (locally named esterellite) site available over the European platform was found. The age of the esterellite rocks was initially estimated as Tertiary (Michel-Lévy, 1912), and later on subjected to controversies until an Ar/Ar dating at 31–33 Ma (Giraud, 1983; Féraud et al., 1995). Early paleomagnetic study (Roche, 1957) comparing esterellite to Permian surrounding rocks, demonstrates that its direction is close to the one usually found in Tertiary and Quaternary rocks and away from those expected for a Permian magnetization. Later, the paleomagnetic study performed by Zijderveld (1975) [44], has been revisited by Vlag et al. (1997), confirming the reliability of this data. A CCW rotation (−17.6° ± 9.6°) is observed through the sampled area of several kilometre width. Therefore, tilting around horizontal axis is unlikely.

3.3 Remagnetized sediments

Several paleomagnetic studies conducted in the Mesozoic blue grey marls and limestones of the Alpine European margin have revealed a normal prefolding remagnetization, carried by magnetite or pyrrhotite. The consistent normal polarity observed in rocks from Liassic to Cretaceous ages, together with the high inclination, definitely exclude that the observed directions are primary. It is tempting to assign this remagnetization to the long normal Cretaceous superchron as suggested by Katz et al. (1998 and 2000 [28]), but this would lead to a clockwise rotation of the obviously undeformed Massif Central sedimentary cover and a discrepancy in inclination. The southern sites: Cévennes [25–26] (Henry et al., 2001; Kechra et al., 2003) and Ventoux [27] (Kechra et al., 2003), have been folded during the Upper Eocene Pyrenean phase (see Bilotte and Canerot, 2006; Peybernès et al., 2007, for the age of the deformation) while the northern sites in the Subalpine massifs of Vercors and Chartreuse [23], showing positive fold tests (Aubourg and Rochette, 1992), have been folded during Miocene (Gidon, 1981). Assuming that magnetization reported by Aubourg and Rochette (1992) is a Tertiary remagnetization, it leads to an insignificant clockwise rotation [23].

The early synfolding nature of the remagnetization in Provence and Cevennes led Kechra et al. (2003) to propose a Pyrenean age (40 Ma) for the widespread remagnetization of all these rocks. Although the northern part of the area remained undeformed, this age corresponds to the onset of collision, final marine retreat and uplift of the area and may have sufficiently modified the fluid-rock equilibrium condition to provoke crystallization of new magnetic grains at the expense of pre-existing iron rich grains. The corresponding chemical remanent magnetization (ChRM) would be acquired on a time span of the order of 1 Ma, thus recording the average polarity of the geomagnetic field. As this polarity appears normal during 80% of the time in between 42 and 38 Ma, the unique polarity of the remagnetization is not contradictory with the presence of several reversals in that time span. Whether this widespread remagnetization is linked to large scale orogenic fluid movements (D’Agrella-Filho et al., 2000; Elmore et al., 2006; Kim et al., 2009) or to interaction with the in situ fluids remains to be discussed, although the second explanation seems more likely in the present context. On the other hand, the burial remagnetization invoked by Katz et al. (1998, 2000) is clearly excluded as a general mechanism as very little burial have affected the Jura or Massif Central sites compared to their Vocontian trough sites [28]. The Berrias case (Galbrun, 1985 [24a/b]) is special in the sense that it has been claimed as representing a primary lower Cretaceous magnetostratigraphic signal. However, the normal polarity mean direction perfectly fits the predicted Tertiary field and failed the reversal test with the reversed polarity direction (Tab. 1 − 24a/b) which is more in agreement with the Cretaceous age of the rocks. Therefore, we propose that the normal polarity samples (indeed coming from more reduced limestone layers than the reversed sandy layers) of the Berrias study are remagnetized, thus implying that the proposed magnetostratigraphy is not significant.

Many sites collected from the southern Subalpine chains exhibit syn-folding remagnetization (Cairanne, 2004; Sonnette, 2012). All these syn-folding sites are discarded from this study. Indeed, the superposition of 2 or 3 deformation phases forbids any hope of finding an original direction using only a tilting to restore the bedding back to the horizontal.

The study carried out on the sedimentary cover of the Barrot dome (Sonnette et al., 2014; [30]) suggests a secondary magnetization acquired during or after folding. Its directional analyse shows an apparent large CCW rotation (65.1° ± 15.0°). As the Permian substratum recorded no rotation (Bogdanoff and Schott, 1977), the rotation is mainly accommodated by the cover–substratum decoupling on the sliding of the Triassic gypsum décollement layer. This large rotation is therefore not representative of crustal bloc motion.

Cairanne in his PhD (2004) studied the remagnetization in several areas of the southern Subalpine massifs. In two sectors, (Esparon [31] and Gaubert [32]), the fold test is negative. As Pliocene strata are folded (Gidon and Pairis, 1992), the remagnetization is younger than 10 Ma. Similar results are observed for the Bès area [33] and the Barrème anticline [34] where Oligocene strata are folded. It implies that remagnetization is younger than 23 Ma. In the Subalpine Arc de Castellane and Arc de Nice, post folding remagnetization occurred in few areas (Sonnette, 2012). As the last folding event occurred during Miocene (Dardeau, 1988; Laurent et al., 2000; Giannerini et al., 2011), a significant rotation is observed in Arc de Nice (13.1° ± 12.2° [36]), while in Arc de Castellane insignificant CCW rotation (7.2 ° ± 12.7° [35]) occurred.

The northern sites in Jura Mountains [37] present a post folding (i.e. Miocene) remagnetization associated to alteration of primary pyrite and magnetite (Johnson et al., 1984). This remagnetization presents no significant rotation (−3.2° ± 10.5°).

3.4 Remagnetization without paleohorizontal constrain

Finally, several remagnetized crystalline or metamorphic units are reported in this section, even if in some cases bedding can be retrieved. Indeed, the ChRM is assumed to be of thermo-chemical origin and acquired during the metamorphism of the metamorphic units. The Aar Massif data [45] show small but consistent rotations that could be explained by a tilting. However, the coherent rotation of the Aar and Swiss molasse data are in favour of a vertical axis clockwise rotation. The directions of the entries in the Eastern Dauphinois area ([46, 47, 48] Tab. 1) have been calculated using all the published directions separated in three areas spreading in N-S over more than 100 km. Then even if some sites are tilted around horizontal axis (see Ménard and Rochette, 1992; Crouzet et al., 1996; Dumont et al., 2008), the regional mean could be considered reliable for a regional scale rotation around vertical axis discussion.

All the units, west of the Penninic front, yield small or unresolved rotations. The exception of the Digne nappe (Aubourg and Chabert-Pelline 1999 [38]) showing a significant departure from the expected direction (CCW rotation = 17.6° ± 22.2°) can be explained by rotation during thrusting and nappe emplacement. This was suggested by several authors such as Sonnette et al. (2014).

If we except the entries with probable local block rotation (ie: 2, 3, 4, 38), and those close to the central part of the Alps (i.e., longitude > 7°) where the E-W structures become linear, we observe that CW rotations are mainly present north of Grenoble, while CCW rotations concentrate to the south (Fig. 2A). Plotting rotation vs. latitude (Fig. 2A) suggests a visual trend from clockwise rotation in the North to a counterclockwise rotation in the South. We must notice that this trend is determined by a linear regression with a very low coefficient of determination (R2 ∼ 0.26) that imply it is not statistically significant. So instead of a trend one may identify two different rotation regimes north and south of latitude 45. The data from Cevennes, which are assumed to be on the stable European platform and the data with evidence of local rotation are not included in the trend, nor in the oroclinal test (Fig. 2B). In order to have a more classical view of the paleomagnetic data, the usual oroclinal test was performed using Paleomagnetism.org2 software online (Koymans et al., 2016; Pastor-Galán et al., 2017). It uses bootstrapped linear regressive techniques to determine the relationship between strike of geological structures and rotation. The result indicate a coefficient of determination R2 = 0.377 and a Pearson coefficient Ï = 0.614 suggesting respectively a trend and a high correlation. Notice that rotations are small or unresolved and that the oroclinal fold test indicate a best grouping between 6 and 17% of unfolding. This point suggests that bending has few impact on rotations. The conclusion is that whatever is the tectonic mechanism that produce the arcuate shape of the Subalpine massifs, paleomagnetic data does not evidenced similar shape.

thumbnail Fig. 2

A- Rotation versus latitude for the External zones of the western Alps. An apparent N-S trend of rotation is highlighted by the regression line calculated excluding possible local rotations (R2 ∼ 0.26). Full dots: probable local rotations (see discussion in the text). Numbers in brackets correspond to entries in Table 1. Rotations calculated south (yellow) and north (blue) of 45° latitude are indicated. In the South counter clockwise rotation for an age of 25 (10) Ma is 10.3°+ −6.4° (7.6°+ −5.9°). In the North, insignificant rotation for an age of 25 (10) Ma is observed: 4.5°+ −12.8° (7.2°+ −12.6°). B- Oroclinal test (rotation versus strike of the fold axis) for the Subalpine Massifs. The red line shows the total least squares regression for the data. The surrounding shaded pink area illustrates the confidence interval for 1000 bootstrapped regressions.

4 Alpine internal units: the Briançonnais block and the Piemonte − ligurian areas

There is little hope to retrieve primary magnetization in sedimentary rocks from the metamorphic internal belt due to strong deformation and metamorphism. Also, without fold test these data must be taken with great caution. As an example, the Permian paleomagnetic direction from the Guil valley (Roche and Westphal, 1969 [55]) are quite close to those from the Amonitico Rosso from the same area (Thomas et al., 1999 [49]). Also, the 8 sites of Roche and Westphal (1969) are all of reverse polarity. Therefore, we assume that the direction of Roche and Westphal (1969) is more likely representative of an Eocene remagnetization than a primary magnetization.

4.1 Tertiary sediments

In the present database, all the reported primary directions in sedimentary rocks are from the unmetamorphosed and slightly deformed Tertiary Piemonte Basin [9 to 13] (VandenBerg, 1979; Thio, 1988; Bormiolli and Lanza, 1995; Carrapa et al., 2003 and Maffione et al., 2008) or from the Ultra Helvetic Flysch (Piquet et al., 2000) [7–8]. As important rotations occurred during sedimentation (see below), we will only use the oldest sediments (i.e. Oligocene to lower Miocene) in order to not bias the total global rotation. Bormioli and Lanza (1995) who studied the Monferrato and Torino Hills (the northern outcrops of the Apennine block) have concluded that their data are showing a ca 32° ± 29° CCW rotation [9]. This conclusion is only based on the result from 2 sites over 17 studied. From the 17 sites, 6 gives scatter results, 7 presents directions close to the present day expected direction, 2 showing 100° CCW rotation are interpreted as local block rotations and 2 showing ca 32° rotation are compared to the rotation of the Adriatic block. Besides, the age of the sediments ranges from Burdigalian to Seravallian and the primary character of ChRM is not well evidenced. Therefore, the data from Bormioli and Lanza (1995) should not be considered regionally significant until a new study is performed on this key area.

Surprisingly, the other paleomagnetic results [10 to 13] exhibit an important and very similar CCW rotation (44 to 54°). Using different strata, Carrapa et al. (2003) and Maffione et al. (2008) were able to demonstrate that most of the rotation occurred between 23 and 13 Ma. Preliminary results from Vandenberg (1979) [10] have to be discussed in the light of other published data. The late Eocene to early Oligocene data present a CCW of 32° ± 8° while Early Miocene data present a CW of 9° ± 10°. One can argue that the CW rotation is not significant, but it may also be a local effect as Vandenberg’s work is only based on one site. If we apply to the Eocene-Oligocene the local CW deduced from the lower Miocene direction, we can argue for a ca 40° CCW, i.e. the same magnitude than in the data from Maffione et al. (2008), Carrapa et al. (2003) and Thio (1988).

The Eocene-Oligocene Ultrahelvetic flysch from the Prealps nappes exhibits a primary or pre-tilting remanence [7–8] (Piquet et al., 2000) showing important CCW rotations (54° ± 19° and 123° ± 11° for Dérochoir and Marais area respectively). As the different areas (Dérochoir and Marais) are not in the same Klippe and as they underwent different amount of rotation, they have been separated in the database. These rotations cannot have occurred after the nappe emplacement over the Subalpine massifs because the latter do not rotate more than few degrees. In the Prealpine nappes, the rotations may have occurred before emplacement for [7] and complicated during emplacement [8] as the structural data orientation are similar with the Penninic units and the rotations largely differ from the Subalpine massifs.

4.2 Tertiary intrusives

From the deformed units, only five studies with primary directions are available on the Eastern side of the Penninic front, all of which lacking a full paleohorizontal reference but consistently pointing toward large CCW rotations. A few primary Oligocene directions have been reported from the Bergell [39] and Traversella [42] intrusions (Heller, 1980; Lanza, 1984 respectively), and from andesitic dikes and flows in the Sesia zone (Lanza, 1977 and 1979) [40–41] and in the Biella zone (Bigioggero et al., 1981) [43]. In several cases a tilt correction has been made assuming that the dikes were initially vertical (Lanza, 1977). However, this assumption may not be correct, thus explaining why these data are listed in category III and not I. Except the data from the Bergell massif, the others present low (30 to 40°) to very low (0–10°) inclination. This has been explained by a rotation around a N20 horizontal axis (i.e. tilting) of about 60° (Schmid et al., 1989). Using such tilting leads to avoid rotation (around vertical axis). Also, in order to explain the data, an infinite number of solutions can be produced by combining tilting and rotation. In the case of the Western Alps, it must be mentioned that 2 sites from the Traversella intrusion [53] are carrying a secondary component with no inclination anomaly and showing a CCW rotation of about 22° ± 39° (Lanza, 1984). If we take into account this quite poorly constrained data, the CCW rotation from the Sesia zone discussed above must be younger than the tilting.

The Tertiary ChRM reported from the Adamello contact aureole (Kipfer and Heller, 1988) [22] was probably acquired during the post intrusion cooling and deformation that occurred in between 42 and 30 Ma (Pennacchioni et al., 2006). Therefore, and according to the surrounding data, it is quite surprising that this ChRM presents a direction close to the present day expected direction. There we suspect a recent remagnetization and discard these data.

4.3 Remagnetized rocks

Among category IV, the Briançonnais data [49] have also been “untilted”, not based on stratigraphic bedding (the fold test is negative) but on the reconstitution of tilted block formed in a late extensional phase, post-dating the remagnetization (Thomas et al., 1999). Associated with data from Ubaye [50] and Liguria [51], the large rotation inferred is well defined and again not possible to explain by coherent tiltings (Collombet, 2001). The age of the remagnetization is unclear but most probably corresponds to the end of the major synmetamorphic deformation phase during the Oligocene. The strong rotation of the post-metamorphic magnetization of the Lepontine zone (Heller, 1980) [52] has been reinterpreted as an effect of tilting (Rosenberg and Heller, 1997). This point of view is not consistent with the secondary directions reported by Lanza (1984) in the Traversella intrusion [53]. Moreover, the Triassic section from Besano Monte San Giorgio in the Dolomite massif [54] shows a consistent post-folding ChRM interpreted as due to thermo-chemical remagnetization during Eocene time (Dallanave and Muttoni, 2007). It presents a CCW rotation (22° ± 7°) very similar to the one reported for the Traversella intrusion. Therefore, the coherency between rotations within Lepontine area and rotations from the surrounding area reinforced the original vertical axis interpretation of Heller (1980).

5 The Apennine and Corsica-North Sardinia paradox

The Italian peninsula and the Corsica-Sardinia paleomagnetic data will not be discussed at full length as its complex rotational history was clearly exposed by several papers (see discussion and references in Siravo et al., 2023 and in Maffione et al., 2008). In this section, we would like to point out some paleomagnetic data that appear to be important in the Alpine scheme of block rotations.

The Early to middle Miocene sediments from the Epiligurian sites (Muttoni et al., 1998) |21] show a ∼61° ± 14° CCW rotation versus stable Europe. This value is in the same magnitude than the one from the Tertiary Piemont Basin (55° ± 16° CCW). The northern Apennine data from Speranza et al. (1997) and Lanci and Wezel (1995) show a post-Miocene CCW of ∼27° (vs stable Europe). This may imply, if we consider North Apennine and Epiligurian as a rigid bloc, that it underwent half of the total rotation (∼ 30° CCW) during only the upper Miocene.

The age of the Corsica − North Sardinia rotation is now well defined (see Edel et al. (2001), Gattacceca et al. (2007) and Siravo et al. (2023) for discussion). Most of the 45° CCW rotation occurred between 21.0 and 17.5 Ma. Only less than 10° remain until 15 Ma. The 60° CCW rotation reported by Siravo et al. (2023) for Corsica − North Sardinia is mainly deduced from Permian volcanics and these data are therefore excluded from our study.

The magnetization from the Middle Miocene sediments of the St Florent Basin (Vigliotti and Kent, 1990) show antipodal directions [17]. As the fold test is negative, the authors claim for a secondary remanence (D=9.8; I=62.8; α95=6.6; k=192). But as the number of sites is limited (N=4), we can suspect the accuracy of the fold test and if we assume a primary remanence (D=342.6; I=47.0; α95=9.3; k=99), it gives a consistent CCW rotation of 21° ± 11°, very similar to the one deduced from pyroclastites of Bonifacio area [19] (Ferrandini et al., 2003). But due to low number of flows, we can doubt that secular variations are averaged. Also Vigliotti and Kent (1990), report a post 40 Ma CCW rotation of 37° ± 6° [18] based only on one site. Confirmation of the large (44° ± 6°) post 25 Ma CCW rotation of Corsica, previously inferred only from Permian data and continuity with Sardinia came from only one site [20]. Therefore, it can also be interpreted as a local rotation.

The amount of Tertiary rotation of the Corsica-North Sardinia block has been a long-lasting debate. The study of Gattacceca et al. (2007) based on numerous and precisely date lava flows, conclude for a ca 45° CCW rotation for North Sardinia. For Corsica, the debate is still open as the data of Vigliotti and Kend (1990) ∼34° CCW and of Ferrandini et al. (2003) ∼44° CCW rotation are only based on few sites. It must be noticed that South Sardinia was submitted to 86° ± 7° CCW rotation (Siravo et al., 2023).

6 Discussion on tectonic consequences

The post Eocene rotations depicted on Figure 1 delineate block domains with rotations of variable sense and amplitude whose limits do not follow the classical African-European plate boundary. These blocks can be regarded as microplates delimited by major crustal tectonic discontinuities. Following several analogue modelling (Collombet, 2001; Martinod et al., 2024) the block rotations should mainly be driven by lithospheric processes such as subduction and consecutive slab break-off. The size, origin and thickness of these blocks is a question that is not currently solved.

In front of the Alpine wedge, the non-metamorphosed subalpine massifs and the molassic basin show small to unresolved rotations. Also, even when rotations are significant, they come from sedimentary cover usually detached from their crustal basement. The general decoupling of the sedimentary cover from the basement was first suspected by Gidon (1956), and since the advent of balanced geological sections and the ECORS seismic profile has been widely adopted (Gratier et al., 1989; Guellec et al., 1990; Mosar, 1999). Nevertheless, looking at sites located south of 45° latitude (with NW-SE orientation of main geological structures), a small but significant counterclockwise rotation is observed. Its amount is respectively −10.3 ± 6.4° and −7.6 ± 5.9° for a magnetization age of 25 Ma and 10 Ma (Fig. 2A). On the other hand, looking at sites located north of 45° latitude (with NE-SW orientation of main geological structures), no significant rotation is observed. Keeping these points in mind, the more external European basement slices and cover may be transported without rotation (case of Belledonne and central subalpine massifs) or subject to a wrenching and lateral escape or a partial dragging. The first mechanism is suggested if we consider that no significant rotations are evidenced on the European part of the belt. The other mechanism may also be taken into account in order to explain the rotational pattern evidenced in the southern subalpine massifs and in the Provence area. Such mechanisms are compatible with the punching of the European margin by an "Apulian" (or Padanian) block rotating while moving towards the W or NW. A complete review on kinematic models can be found in Brunsmann et al. (2024). Whatever the mechanism is, the rotations are small.

Lateral escape of the Provence area may be facilitated by the opening of the Provencal basin, which started in the Oligocene, even if the main Corsica-Sardinia rotation is limited to the lower Miocene. A remaining compatibility problem concerns the possible rotation of Provence with respect to its western border. It can be solved assuming that the rotation is mainly of Oligocene age. Indeed, this period is characterised in the area by huge triangular semi-grabens that indicated a strong southward gradient of extension (Benedicto, 1996). Conversely, 3D balanced cross sections (Gratier et al., 1989) imply an eastward gradient of shortening with the right rotation angle. If this shortening is synchronous with basin extension, all limits of the rotating Provencal zone are accounted for.

A large zone of important (25 to 50°, Figs. 3 and 4) CCW rotation appears, involving the internal units of the Alps (including the Prealps klippen) and the Piemonte basin. The Periadriatic line separates two blocs of different amount of rotation (Fig. 1). As previously underlined by Schmid et al. (1989) this post-Oligocene deformation results from dextral motion.

The oroclinal test performed using paleomagnetic data from the internal Alps (Fig. 3B) indicates a coefficient of determination R2 = 0.671 and a Pearson coefficient Ï = 0.819 suggesting a high correlation. These statistical parameters are strongly influenced by the rotation of the Ligurian site ([51] − Collombet et al., 2001). By not using this site, R2 = 0.389 and Ï = 0.624. The rotation calculated from the Central Alps (CCW 23.1 ± 17.0°) is not significantly different from the one calculated for the Western Alps (CCW 44.9 ± 31.2°).

These rotations are denied by Brunsmann (2023). In order to explain the arcuate shape of the belt, this author invokes a proto-arc inherited from the subduction period. The existence of such a proto-arc is also supported by restoration of collisional shortening around the arc (Bellahsen et al., 2014; Rosenberg et al., 2021).

In the context of the rotations highlighted by the present study, the Corsica-North Sardinia block can also be fitted with the mainland scheme. According to Siravo et al. (2023), the Corsica − North Sardinia block was submitted to ∼60° CCW rotation since possibly starting close to the Eocene/Oligocene boundary (∼34 Ma). According to Gattacceca et al. (2007), between 20.5 and 15 Ma the Corsica − North Sardinia block rotated ∼45° counterclockwise with respect to stable Europe, around a pole located north of Corsica. This implies that a rotation of ∼15° occurred during the Oligocene phase of rifting. Similar amount and age of rotation for Corsica − North Sardinia block and Appennine − Tertiary Piemonte Basin block (ca 45–50° CCW and 22 to 17 Ma) suggests that all the domain moves simultaneously together (Maffione et al., 2008). We can also add the Penninic area to this highly rotated domain. However different results, found in allochtonous cover units, do not mean that the underlying Apulian lithosphere did not rotate as a whole. The proposed generalized rotation is also compatible with the study of Thöny et al. (2006) in the central and eastern Alps.

These strongly rotated units are separated from the less to non-rotated units by the Penninic front in the North, implying about 100 km of right-lateral strike slip movement on this major structure. In the South, the limit should be placed in the Ligurian basin. The Eastward limit of the rotated block is still controversial (Thöny et al., 2006). It must be noticed that the amount of rotation is different on both sides of the Po plain (Fig. 3): 26.8 +- 14° in the North ("Alpine bloc": Dec = 339.3, Inc = 48.6, α 95 = 11.6, N=7) and 49.0 +− 9.5° in the South ("North Apennine bloc": Dec = 317.0, Inc = 48.9, α 95 = 7.8, N=5). The paleolatitudes deduced from the inclination of the unquestionable data of the two blocks are close to 29–30 °N. It can be deduced a N-S displacement of these blocs of about 1700 +- 400 km since the time of remanence acquisition (mainly since upper Oligocene). Assuming an Oligocene magnetization age and comparing to the Oligocene expected direction for stable Europe a difference of about 10° is observable. While the difference does not exceed the confidence cone, it may suggest a minimal N-S shortening across the Alps of ca 500 km since the Oligocene, compatible with the Schmid et al. (1996) view. These results also imply that the Monferratto-Torino Hills north verging thrust is a major structure accommodating the differential rotation between a “Liguria − Corsica − North Sardinia” block and a “Southern Alpine” block. This point was already raised by VandenBerg and Wonders (1976) from the study of Mesozoic primary remanences in Tuscany and Southern Alps. It is also well established according to several plate-tectonic reconstructions (Handy et al., 2010). The eastward prolongation of this major fault zone, now buried under a thick Late Tertiary to Quaternary sedimentary cover, is probably in connection with the north Apennine frontal thrust. This is also in very good agreement with the paleomagnetic data from the Colli Euganei (Soffel, 1972) exhibiting a ca 55° CCW rotation between the Eocene and the Miocene. In the opposite direction, the differential motion between the two blocks (Alpine and North Apennine) may be transferred into the Ligurian basin where the Alpine block disappears.

According to Stampfli et al. (1998), incorporation of the Briançonnais terrane in the accretionary prism is diachronous from East (∼ 50–45 Ma) to West (∼37–34 Ma). The final stages of the continental collision between the European and Adriatic continental margins were accomplished by ∼ 35–32 Ma (e.g., Berger and Bousquet, 2008; Stampfli and Hochard, 2009; Handy et al., 2010). At this time, the Penninic units underwent a HP or UHP metamorphism (Rosenbaum and Lister, 2005). Also at ca 30 Ma, a thickened crustal bridge was already built up across the European-African suture (Jolivet and Faccenna, 2000) and a similar rotation of both sides can be supported. This rotation may have occurred synchronously with the rotation of the Corsica − North Sardinia block in between 22 and 17 Ma as suggested by Maffione et al. (2008) or partly accommodated during Oligocene. The synchronism of all these rotations is still matter of debate as the crustal blocks involved are probably not the same. In this context, the very large rotations from the southern Briançonnais [51–52] have to be explained. We suggest following Collombet et al. (2002) and Ford et al. (2006) a late Miocene sinistral transpressive shear zone located north of the Argentera massif. This shear zone accommodates the excess rotation of 25 to 60° compared to the Penninic − North Liguria − Corsica − North Sardinia blocs (who rotate only 40–60°). This implies the punching of the European margin by a block moving toward NW that may also explain the observed rotation pattern of the external zones.

Another speculative interpretation resides in the assumption that the southern Briançonnais was subjected to successive CCW rotations. The first one, documented north of the Po plain (25 to 30° CCW) occurring during Oligocene. Then this area is incorporated to the southern block and subjected to a second CCW rotation of ca 50° during lower Miocene. The remaining rotation (ca 30°) may be explained by local tectonic displacements.

Between metamorphism and intrusion emplacement and the occurrence of rotation, a major tectonic event must have occured in order to explain the horizontal axis tilting observed in several data with low to very low inclination (40, 41, 42 and 43 in Tab. 1) as already suggested by several authors (Schmid et al., (1989), Rosenberg and Heller (1997)). According to secondary magnetization in the Traversella intrusion [53], this tilting around horizontal axis is followed by 25–30° CCW rotation (Fig. 5).

thumbnail Fig. 3

A- Rotation versus latitude for the Internal zones and Piemont area; Full square: data used for calculation of “N Apennine block” rotation. Open circle: data used for calculation of “Alpine block” rotation. Amount of rotation for Corsica and Sardinia is graphically indicated on the left of the graph. B- Oroclinal test (rotation versus strike of the main alpine structures) for the Internal zones. The red line shows the total least squares regression for the data. The surrounding shaded yellow area illustrates the confidence interval for 1000 bootstrapped regressions. Rotations of the Western Alps in blue (−44.9 ± 31.2°) and the Central Alps in green (−23.1 ± 17.0°) are indicated.

thumbnail Fig. 4

Stereoplot of paleomagnetic data north (open circle) and south (closed square) of the Pôplain. Means are also indicated.

thumbnail Fig. 5

Schematic maps explaining the alpine rotations and showing − A: the present day situation. The main observed rotations are indicated. Restoration − B: Syn to Post Oligocene rotations and − C: the Eocene shortening. The drawing of the Italian peninsula in the Eocene clearly does not represent the situation at that time as the Apennine develop and deform during and after this period.

7 Conclusions

Based on the present synthesis of paleomagnetic rotations since 40 Ma in the western Alpine realm, areas including oceanic domains (i.e. Corsica- North Sardinia and North Apennine) can play as rigid bodies, while in contrary, internal deformation deduced from paleomagnetic studies evidence that Apulia (Apennine + Southern Alps) cannot be anymore regarded as a rigid body. An important limit occurs below the Po plain.

In the Western Alps, the plate boundary, first localised at the ophiolitic suture, later shifted along the Penninic Frontal Thrust. Since Miocene, the major motions between stable Europe and “Africa” are accommodated along the Penninic Frontal Thrust which in consequence became the new plate boundary. This is currently still the case as evidenced by the present-day seismicity distribution (Larroque et al., 2021; Mathey et al., 2021).

A reappraisal of the internal Alps kinematic scheme seems mandatory to take into account these generalized large rotations. For example, all the westward Eocene transport directions recognized in the internal Alps (Choukroune et al., 1986; Dumont et al., 2011) are no longer in contradiction with the northwestward convergence predicted by plate tectonic reconstruction. Nevertheless, initial pre-Eocene to Eocene N to NW tectonic transport (see for example Dumont et al., 2022) have to be restored according to block rotations depicted by paleomagnetic data.

Tectonic models of the Alps must take into account the observed rotations. In particular, models that preferentially involve slab retreat or slab breakoff due to frictional forces of the slab in the asthenosphere should prohibit any rotation. Taken with care, paleomagnetic data are a powerful tool to better understand the most studied collision belt of the world. In fact, it clearly highlights that 4D view of the alpine dynamics and 3D balanced crustal restoration are needed and should be encouraged.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank F. Speranza and C. Rosenberg for interesting comments and constructive remarks on an earlier version of this work.

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Cite this article as: Crouzet C, Aubourg C, Rochette P, Collombet M, Vandamme D, Ménard G, Gattacceca J. 2025. Post-Eocene rotations in the Western Alpine realm: a review from sixty eight years of paleomagnetic investigations, BSGF - Earth Sciences Bulletin 196: 4. https://doi.org/10.1051/bsgf/2025002

All Tables

Table 1

Paleomagnetic database used in the discussion. N: number of sites used, n: number of samples. D: declination, I: Inclination, α95: 95% confidence cone, K: precision parameter, R: predicted rotation, dR: error on the rotation (calculated after Demarest, 1983). The rotation and its error are calculated taking into account the age of magnetization and the corresponding Torsvik et al. (2012) synthetic APWP reference. (a): combination of data from Crouzet et al., 1996; Dumont et al., 2008; Ménard et Rochette, 1992 and Lamarche et al., 1988.

Table 2

Predicted directions at 45N and 7E for stable Europe versus time. A: Synthetic APWP (Besse and Courtillot, 2002), B: APWP results from post-filtering process and spline regression analysis (Schettino and Scotese, 2005) and C: APWP from Torsvik et al. (2012)).

All Figures

thumbnail Fig. 1

Synthetic structural map of the Western Alps. Major thrust and strike slip faults are indicated, with the Pennicic frontal thrust (PFT) highlighted in bold (after Vialon et al., 1989). Tertiary paleomagnetic rotations versus north are represented according to the code described in the insert. Uncertainty is shown as a pie slice. Number corresponds to the entry in Table 1. A: Argentera Massif, AR: Aar Massif, B: Belledonne crystalline Massif, BZ: Briançonnais zone, DB: Dent Blanche Massif, DH: Delphino-helvetic zone, DM: Dora Maira Massif, L: Lepontine Massif, MoB: Molasse basin, MB: Mont Blanc Massif, PL: Peri-adriatic Line, PN: Prealps Nappes, PZ: Piemontaise zone, PFT: Penninic frontal Thrust, V: Vanoise Massif.

In the text
thumbnail Fig. 2

A- Rotation versus latitude for the External zones of the western Alps. An apparent N-S trend of rotation is highlighted by the regression line calculated excluding possible local rotations (R2 ∼ 0.26). Full dots: probable local rotations (see discussion in the text). Numbers in brackets correspond to entries in Table 1. Rotations calculated south (yellow) and north (blue) of 45° latitude are indicated. In the South counter clockwise rotation for an age of 25 (10) Ma is 10.3°+ −6.4° (7.6°+ −5.9°). In the North, insignificant rotation for an age of 25 (10) Ma is observed: 4.5°+ −12.8° (7.2°+ −12.6°). B- Oroclinal test (rotation versus strike of the fold axis) for the Subalpine Massifs. The red line shows the total least squares regression for the data. The surrounding shaded pink area illustrates the confidence interval for 1000 bootstrapped regressions.

In the text
thumbnail Fig. 3

A- Rotation versus latitude for the Internal zones and Piemont area; Full square: data used for calculation of “N Apennine block” rotation. Open circle: data used for calculation of “Alpine block” rotation. Amount of rotation for Corsica and Sardinia is graphically indicated on the left of the graph. B- Oroclinal test (rotation versus strike of the main alpine structures) for the Internal zones. The red line shows the total least squares regression for the data. The surrounding shaded yellow area illustrates the confidence interval for 1000 bootstrapped regressions. Rotations of the Western Alps in blue (−44.9 ± 31.2°) and the Central Alps in green (−23.1 ± 17.0°) are indicated.

In the text
thumbnail Fig. 4

Stereoplot of paleomagnetic data north (open circle) and south (closed square) of the Pôplain. Means are also indicated.

In the text
thumbnail Fig. 5

Schematic maps explaining the alpine rotations and showing − A: the present day situation. The main observed rotations are indicated. Restoration − B: Syn to Post Oligocene rotations and − C: the Eocene shortening. The drawing of the Italian peninsula in the Eocene clearly does not represent the situation at that time as the Apennine develop and deform during and after this period.

In the text

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