UNA DEFORMAZIONE GRAVITATIVA PROFONDA DI VERSANTE ALL’ORIGINE DEL PIANO DI ONETO, VAL GRAVEGLIA (APPENNINO LIGURE)

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Luigi Carobene
Andrea Cevasco

Abstract

L. Carobene & A. Cevasco, A deep-seated gravitational slope deformation as the genesis of the Piano di Oneto, Val
Graveglia (Ligurian Apennines). (IT ISSN 0394-3356, 2007).
A new hypothesis on the genesis of the Piano di Oneto, located in the Upper Val Graveglia (Ligurian Apennines) (Fig. 1), on the basis of
field studies and a re-examination of the features distinguishable in geological and topographical maps and aerial photographs. The
Piano di Oneto is one of the largest flat areas of the Ligurian Apennines; interpreted as an epigeal form of prevalently carsic origin, it
has been defined more than once as the largest existing “dolina” in eastern Liguria (Fig. 7).
A review of the available data, an analysis of the morphological features at both the macro- and mesoscale and various geological and
morphotectonic characteristics provide a new basis for discussion.
From a geological point of view (Fig. 2) the area is characterised by formations associable with the Val di Vara Supergroup (Internal
Ligurids of various authors), divided into two main units, the underlying Mt. Porcile Unit and the overlying Mt. Zatta Unit (Gottero Unit
of various authors). The former contains notable ophiolitic sequences (basalts, serpentinites), a volcano-sedimentary complex (ophiolitic breccias) and a sedimentary cover (Mt. Alpe Jaspers, Calpionelle Limestones, Palombini Clays). A little to the east of the Val
Graveglia – Val di Vara watershed, under the Mt. Porcile Unit, lies the Colli-Tavarone Formation (Upper Cretaceous – Palaeocene),
which consists of layered claystones interspersed with thin layers of siltites and calcarenites.
Various authors have studied the structure of this area, which is exceptionally complex. Its complexity is evident in the cross section
reported in Fig. 3, the trace of which is visible in Fig. 2. All the structural reconstructions made of the area underline the fact that there
is no carbonatic mass under the Piano di Oneto.
Since the Pliocene, the complicated structural situation described above has been subjected to extensional tectonics that have given it
its peculiar morphostructural conditions and been the main underlying cause of landslides in this zone as in other parts of Liguria.
An analysis of the orientation of the hydrographic network and the watershed lines indicate their close dependence on the main neotectonic lines, which are oriented ENE – WSW (56° - 66°), NNW – SSE (150°), N – S and E – W. It is possible to say that the majority of
the geomorphological alignments correspond to fracture systems or Plio-Quaternary faults but not to the more ancient faults visible in
Fig. 2.
In the area under study (Fig. 6) there are morphological features (reverse slopes, bulges and landslides) that are specific signs of gravitational slope deformations.
The studies carried out indicate that the genesis of the Piano di Oneto should be looked for in a “deep-seated gravitational slope deformation” caused by the high energy of the relief associated with the uplift of the zone and the high erosive capacity of the watercoursesthat have caused the deepening of the hydrographic network.
Given the above scenario, the depression under study could be interpreted as the filling up of a trench running parallel to the ridge (NW– SE) with silty-clayey material washed down from the surrounding slopes (Figs. 6 and 9). We believe that only its extension towards the WSW, where there seem to be Calpionelle Limestones, can be imputed to carsic and erosive phenomena.

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How to Cite
Carobene, Luigi, and Andrea Cevasco , trans. 2007. “UNA DEFORMAZIONE GRAVITATIVA PROFONDA DI VERSANTE ALL’ORIGINE DEL PIANO DI ONETO, VAL GRAVEGLIA (APPENNINO LIGURE)”. Alpine and Mediterranean Quaternary 20 (1): 45-56. https://amq.aiqua.it/index.php/amq/article/view/411.
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